<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057593_0001"/>
?he iEaHt (Earolmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 Noj6 2 7<lb/>
Tuesday, November 29,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Supervisory Board<lb/>
Created To Guide<lb/>
Rental Operations<lb/>
Director of Student Health Services Dr. James McCallum addressed<lb/>
the Student Government Association Monday night. McCallum spoke<lb/>
on the various health services offered on campus. After the speech.<lb/>
the SGA voted to create a refrigerator board to oversee ail refrigerator<lb/>
rentals. In the past, the rental system has been abused. SGA meetings<lb/>
are held every Monday at 5 p.m.<lb/>
Watkins Selected As WZMB Manager<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Sttff ? r1l?r<lb/>
The ECU Media Board in a<lb/>
meeting last Tuesday appointed<lb/>
Greg Watkins as General<lb/>
Manager of WZMB, the campus<lb/>
radio station. Watkins replaces<lb/>
Jim Ensor, who resigned in Oc-<lb/>
tober.<lb/>
"I'm pleased with it Watkins<lb/>
said. Watkins, 29, has been work-<lb/>
ing at WZMB since last summer,<lb/>
when he began as a disc jockey.<lb/>
Since then he has served as rock<lb/>
music director, assistant general<lb/>
manager and promotional direc-<lb/>
tor. Following Ensor's resigna-<lb/>
tion, Watkins was appointed in-<lb/>
terim general manager.<lb/>
"We had some really good in-<lb/>
terviews with some really<lb/>
qualified candidates said Media<lb/>
Board Chairman Mark Niewald.<lb/>
"Greg had the experience, and I<lb/>
do feel that that was what got him<lb/>
hired he said.<lb/>
Watkins said he would like to<lb/>
make the station more accessible<lb/>
to students. "To accomplish this<lb/>
we're playing more and different<lb/>
types of music and providing<lb/>
readier access to our public service<lb/>
facilities he said.<lb/>
Stressing that the station is a<lb/>
student station, Watkins said he<lb/>
has strong beliefs about the type<lb/>
of music that will be played.<lb/>
"When I became rock director, I<lb/>
made a few changes in the music<lb/>
we're playing. 1 personally believe<lb/>
that a radio station which by<lb/>
charter belongs to the student<lb/>
body should serve as much of that<lb/>
student body as possible he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Niewald cited the changes made<lb/>
by Watkins. "The board was real-<lb/>
ly impressed by a lot of the<lb/>
changes that have been taking<lb/>
place during the past six months,<lb/>
as far as format change and play-<lb/>
ing music that's more appealing to<lb/>
students. A lot of the students I've<lb/>
talked to have been really impress-<lb/>
ed and are starting to listen to<lb/>
WZMB a lot more he said.<lb/>
Ensor's resignation was due to<lb/>
what he termed academic and<lb/>
health problems and "the<lb/>
pressures of the job Watkins<lb/>
said he didn't think that this<lb/>
would be a problem for him.<lb/>
"It was a combination of things<lb/>
that forced Jim to resign. My<lb/>
situtation is a little better than<lb/>
Jim's was he said. Niewald add-<lb/>
ed that the Media Board was con-<lb/>
cerned about keeping the radio<lb/>
station at its current level in order<lb/>
to limit the responsibilities and<lb/>
pressures of the job.<lb/>
The possibility of WZMB's at-<lb/>
taining national public radio<lb/>
status was raised recently. "The<lb/>
 -mm<lb/>
rr- T. ? <lb/>
physical restrictions of our radio<lb/>
station make it impossible to ob-<lb/>
tain NPR status Watkins said.<lb/>
"We are not a public radio sta-<lb/>
tion, that's the bottom line. We<lb/>
are a student radio station<lb/>
Watkins said he feels that many<lb/>
students listen to the station, but<lb/>
added that he "would like it if<lb/>
more students would give us a<lb/>
listen. More than any other radio<lb/>
station, we are open to sugges-<lb/>
tions and requests from our<lb/>
listeners Watkins said.<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association Legislature created<lb/>
Monday by unanimous consent a<lb/>
refrigerator board to oversee the<lb/>
operation of the Refrigerator<lb/>
Rental System. A governing<lb/>
board like the one created was<lb/>
greatly needed according high-<lb/>
placed SGA officials.<lb/>
The refrigerator board is the<lb/>
end result of more than one year's<lb/>
work. The impetus behind<lb/>
creating it, according to SGA<lb/>
Secretary Becky Talley, was the<lb/>
lack of supervision the SGA had<lb/>
over past refrigerator rental<lb/>
managers. Talley said the free rein<lb/>
in past years have led to abuses of<lb/>
the system.<lb/>
The board will be effective in<lb/>
January 1984 and be chaired by<lb/>
the SGA treasurer. Members will<lb/>
include a staff member selected by<lb/>
the vice chancellor for student<lb/>
life, the three Student Residence<lb/>
Association vice presidents, a day<lb/>
student and the university unions<lb/>
business manager who will not<lb/>
have a vote.<lb/>
Policy making will be the main<lb/>
concern of the board. The separa-<lb/>
tion of policy from administra-<lb/>
tion, according to Director of<lb/>
University Unions and SGA ad-<lb/>
visor Rudolph Alexander, will<lb/>
lead to a smoother operation. The<lb/>
board will recommend to the SGA<lb/>
Legislature how budget surpluses<lb/>
should be spent. Over the past<lb/>
several years, the rental service<lb/>
has accumulated slightly less than<lb/>
$40,000 in surplus revenue.<lb/>
"I'll now have someone to go<lb/>
to when I need some advice or<lb/>
have an idea said Refrigerator<lb/>
Rental Manager Tory Russo.<lb/>
Russo, along with SGA President<lb/>
Paul Naso, SGA Secretary Sarah<lb/>
Coburn, Legislator Mike Dixon<lb/>
and Talley, worked on creating<lb/>
the board.<lb/>
Past abuses of the system, ac-<lb/>
cording to Russo, have resulted in<lb/>
the loss of refrigerators. In April<lb/>
of 1981, then Refrigerator Rental<lb/>
Manager Ed Walters was accused<lb/>
by state auditors of being un-<lb/>
Roaao<lb/>
cooperative during an audit of the<lb/>
rental system. The auditor said<lb/>
problems in management led to<lb/>
the accumulation of outstanding<lb/>
contracts and lost refrigerators.<lb/>
Before the creation of the<lb/>
board, the SGA secretary kept<lb/>
track of the refrigerator rental<lb/>
budget although she had no<lb/>
authority to do so. Talley said she<lb/>
now feels she has the authority to<lb/>
rule on rental manager decisions.<lb/>
Rental managers are appointed<lb/>
by the SGA president without<lb/>
consent of the legislature. This<lb/>
method of appointment can lead<lb/>
to favoritism, and thus, according<lb/>
to SGA officials is another reason<lb/>
for the creation of the board.<lb/>
Russo said of the $40,000 the<lb/>
rental service has now, $10,000 of<lb/>
it have been given to the Transit<lb/>
System for the operation of their<lb/>
night bus schedule and $1,000 to<lb/>
Pirate Walk for the purchase of<lb/>
jackets.<lb/>
The remainder will be used for<lb/>
the purchase of badly needed new<lb/>
refrigerators and the branching<lb/>
out of rental services, according<lb/>
to Russo. At present, the rental<lb/>
system offers a copying services to<lb/>
the students through the student<lb/>
supply store and the Croatan.<lb/>
A charter for the board will be<lb/>
drawn up by the SGA Legislature.<lb/>
Demand For Courses Causes Problems<lb/>
(CPS) ? Student demand for cer-<lb/>
tain career-oriented courses has<lb/>
outstripped colleges' ability to<lb/>
provide them, and soon only top<lb/>
students may be able to get into<lb/>
them, educators around the coun-<lb/>
try report.<lb/>
"We have students back for a<lb/>
fifth year because they rraven't<lb/>
been able to get all their required<lb/>
courses says Harold Kidder,<lb/>
faculty chairman at West Virginia<lb/>
University.<lb/>
To cope with student demand<lb/>
for business courses, the Universi-<lb/>
ty of Illinois' business school now<lb/>
only lets in freshmen with high<lb/>
grade point aver ages. (The ECU<lb/>
School of Business has instituted a<lb/>
similar policy, requiring a 2.5 gpa<lb/>
or special permission for upper<lb/>
level business courses.)<lb/>
"Students admitted this year<lb/>
are no longer guaranteed that they<lb/>
will be able to graduate in certain<lb/>
majors said David Sprecher,<lb/>
provost of the University of<lb/>
California-Berkeley.<lb/>
Berkeley no longer will allow<lb/>
students to declare majors in<lb/>
business economics, communica-<lb/>
tions, computer science,<lb/>
economics and certain engineering<lb/>
specialties.<lb/>
About a third of the student<lb/>
body at the University of<lb/>
Nebraska-Omaha was affected by<lb/>
class closings this fall, according<lb/>
to a poll taken by the student<lb/>
government there.<lb/>
Nevertheless, says Jack<lb/>
Peltason of the American Council<lb/>
on Education in Washington,<lb/>
D.C "It would be misleading to<lb/>
say thousands of students aren't<lb/>
getting an education because<lb/>
courses aren't there. We have<lb/>
many problems, but that's not a<lb/>
major one.<lb/>
The problem does seem less<lb/>
severe at private colleges, but a<lb/>
wide variety of public campuses<lb/>
are having trouble hiring enough<lb/>
professors to teach the "meal<lb/>
ticket" courses and finding ways<lb/>
of moving money from less-<lb/>
popular courses.<lb/>
"We just don't have as much<lb/>
flexibility as we would like says<lb/>
Warren Haffner, registrar at Penn<lb/>
State. "It's difficult when you're<lb/>
working with human resources<lb/>
"There simply has been a boom<lb/>
in business, computer science and<lb/>
some engineering areas says<lb/>
Kathy Jones, Iowa State's assis-<lb/>
tant registrar. "The demand is<lb/>
growing faster than the ability to<lb/>
fill it<lb/>
To fill it, universities must com-<lb/>
pete directly with private in-<lb/>
dustries for computer scientists<lb/>
and engineers.<lb/>
Fewer people are going into<lb/>
teaching, however. A recent study<lb/>
by the Association for Computing<lb/>
Machinery, a national computer<lb/>
industry information center,<lb/>
found that only 13 percent of its<lb/>
members stayed in education after<lb/>
graduating.<lb/>
The study also found that half<lb/>
the grads make $30,000-$50,000 a<lb/>
year, while 27 percent of them<lb/>
make more than $50,000.<lb/>
By contrast, college faculty<lb/>
members generally get starting<lb/>
salaries between $20,000 and<lb/>
30,000.<lb/>
Schools are finding that to at-<lb/>
tract anyone at all to their high-<lb/>
demand departments, they have<lb/>
to pay more than $30,000.<lb/>
When they do, the new recruits<lb/>
See SCHOOLS, Page 3<lb/>
Groups Provide Thanksgiving Aid pn The Inside<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
i-acu<lb/>
t<lb/>
And They're Off<lb/>
Two ECU students rash to make it to dans on time Monday. Three<lb/>
anexcused cuts and their grade could be lowered.<lb/>
Most of us spent Thanksgiving<lb/>
stuffing our faces and visiting<lb/>
relatives; however, some Green-<lb/>
ville residents weren't so lucky.<lb/>
Locally, many organizations<lb/>
donated food, money and time in<lb/>
an effort to help needy families<lb/>
celebrate Thanksgiving.<lb/>
"We gave food to several<lb/>
famines last week Mrs. Rapson<lb/>
of the Salvation Army said. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Rapson, the organiza-<lb/>
tion gives food to needy families<lb/>
every week on a regular basis.<lb/>
However, the food is given to<lb/>
emergency cases only.<lb/>
Various ECU groups also con-<lb/>
tributed to the Thanksgiving Day<lb/>
cause. Three sororities, Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta, Alpha Delta Pi and Delta<lb/>
Zeta collected food to give to local<lb/>
families. Along with collecting<lb/>
food, the Delta Zetas contributed<lb/>
money to send their house mother<lb/>
to Maine so she could visit her<lb/>
grandchildren. Residents of Jones<lb/>
dorm collected food for their<lb/>
housekeepers.<lb/>
One of Greenville's bigger<lb/>
Thanksgiving dinners took place<lb/>
at St. Gabriel's School<lb/>
Auditorium where members of St.<lb/>
Gabriel's Catholic Church and the<lb/>
Tabernacle of Prayer held a din-<lb/>
ner for many local residents.<lb/>
Father Jerry Sherba of St.<lb/>
Gabriel's said, "Everyone was<lb/>
welcome ? the rich, the poor, the<lb/>
lonely, the old. We didn't want<lb/>
anyone to be lonely or hungry on<lb/>
Thanksgiving<lb/>
Dr. Nina Blount, who is the ad-<lb/>
ministration manager in the allied<lb/>
health department and a member<lb/>
of the Tabernacle of Prayer, said<lb/>
approximately 300 dinners were<lb/>
served; 180 of these dinners were<lb/>
delivered to various families.<lb/>
Blount said a church van picked<lb/>
up elderly persons who had no<lb/>
transportation to the event.<lb/>
Sherba said the Thanksgiving<lb/>
Day dinner "was a dream I've had<lb/>
for years and it came true He<lb/>
added, "The neighbors are still<lb/>
talking about it so I know it was a<lb/>
huge success<lb/>
"We are going to try to con-<lb/>
tinue this throughout the years<lb/>
Blount said.<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Entertainment7<lb/>
SportsIt<lb/>
Classifieds12<lb/>
? Starting today, The East<lb/>
Carolinian wffl be nuuaag ?<lb/>
crossword puzzle once a<lb/>
Answers will appeal<lb/>
for each Tuesdays<lb/>
the puzzle, page 6.<lb/>
? U.S. Rep. R<lb/>
(D-Ore.) has propoi<lb/>
college scholarships for<lb/>
It<lb/>
S.<lb/>
<lb/>
'?a wn iahi l a?i ii o?i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057593_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 29, 1983<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item<lb/>
printed In the announcement<lb/>
column, please type it on an an-<lb/>
nouncement form and send It to<lb/>
The East Carolinian in care of<lb/>
the production manaoer<lb/>
Announcement forms art<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office In the Publications<lb/>
Building Flyers and handvrrif<lb/>
ten copy on odd-sized paper can<lb/>
not be accepted<lb/>
There Is no charge for an<lb/>
nouncements, but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore, we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you<lb/>
want and suggest that you do not<lb/>
rely solely on this column for<lb/>
publicity<lb/>
The deadline for an<lb/>
nouncements is 3 p m Monday<lb/>
for the Tuesday paper and 3<lb/>
p m Wednesday tor the Thurs<lb/>
day paper No announcements<lb/>
received after these deadlines<lb/>
will be printed<lb/>
This space is available to a"<lb/>
campus organizations and<lb/>
departments<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
REPUBLICANS<lb/>
Tonight at 530 p.m the Col<lb/>
lege Republicans will meet In<lb/>
the Mendenhali Coffeehouse<lb/>
Details of our new project,<lb/>
Adoot a Marine will be<lb/>
presented All CR's and persons<lb/>
interested in the College<lb/>
Republicans are urged to at<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay Com<lb/>
munity will meet Monday. Dec<lb/>
5 at 730 p.m The meeting will<lb/>
be held at the Catholic Newman<lb/>
Center, 953 East 10th Street (at<lb/>
the bottom oi College Hill) All<lb/>
Interested persons are cordially<lb/>
invited to attend<lb/>
ACCOUNTING<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
The Accounting Society will<lb/>
rold it's dinner meeting on Mon<lb/>
day. Dec 5 at 7 p m at Western<lb/>
Sizziin, 10th St The guest<lb/>
speaker will be Larry Keecr.<lb/>
CA from Pittard and Perry<lb/>
Members and prospective<lb/>
members are Tvited to attend<lb/>
Signup sheet is on Accounting<lb/>
Society Bulletin Board<lb/>
ALL CAMPUS<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
Friday, Dec I Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
will host their annual Chill Thrill<lb/>
All Campus Party located at 40?<lb/>
Elizabeth Street from 3 p.m. to a<lb/>
p.m Drawing for 10 speed bike<lb/>
will be held along with many<lb/>
other prizes. Show your Pirate<lb/>
Spirit and stop by and enoy the<lb/>
fun Must have valid ID to con<lb/>
sume beverage Tickets tor<lb/>
drawing available in front of stu<lb/>
dent supply store or from any<lb/>
Phi Tau<lb/>
PHYE MAJORS<lb/>
All students who plan to<lb/>
declare physical education as a<lb/>
malor should report to Minges<lb/>
Coliseum at 10:00 am, Thurs<lb/>
day. Dec. ? for a motor and<lb/>
physical fitness test Satlsfac<lb/>
tory performance on this test Is<lb/>
required as a prerequiste for of<lb/>
flclal admittance to the physical<lb/>
education malor program More<lb/>
detailed Information concerning<lb/>
the test Is available by calling<lb/>
757 4441 or 444J. Any student<lb/>
with medical condition that<lb/>
would contralndlcate partlclpa<lb/>
tion is the testing program<lb/>
should contact Dr Israel at<lb/>
757-447<lb/>
PHI ETA<lb/>
SIGMA<lb/>
There will be a dinner meeting<lb/>
Thurs. Dec. 1 at Parker's Barb<lb/>
que at 4:00 Or Markowski will<lb/>
speak about marriage and fami<lb/>
ly relations. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
ACCT SOCIETY<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
The Accounting Society will<lb/>
hold if s dinner meeting on Mon<lb/>
day, Dec 5 at 7 p.m at Western<lb/>
Sizziin, loth Street The guest<lb/>
speaker will be Larry Keech.<lb/>
CPA from Pittard and Perry<lb/>
Members and prospective<lb/>
members are invited to attend.<lb/>
Sign up sheet is on Accounting<lb/>
Society Bulletin Board<lb/>
UBE<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
The Department of English in<lb/>
vltes applications tor newly<lb/>
established University Book Ex<lb/>
change Scholarship, a $750<lb/>
award based on academic<lb/>
achievement, citizenship and<lb/>
leadership and potential. To ap-<lb/>
ply, you must (1) be a currently<lb/>
enrolled senior English maior<lb/>
(1) have an overall GPA of 3 5 or<lb/>
above (3) submit a one-page.<lb/>
MALE STRIPPER<lb/>
The pledges of Sigma Nu pre<lb/>
sent the first ever Ladles Lock<lb/>
in at the Elbo room, Nov 29<lb/>
featuring a professional Male<lb/>
Stripper Ladies will be allowed<lb/>
in at ? p.m. to get happy hour<lb/>
prices and to see the STRIP<lb/>
PER. Then at 10 p.m the men<lb/>
will be let in to get the same hap<lb/>
py hour prices all night Great<lb/>
door prizes will be given out at<lb/>
11 p.m Get your advance<lb/>
tickets from any Sigma Nu<lb/>
pledge See ad this page<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
ECU CIRCLE K CLUB invites<lb/>
you to come out and loin us this<lb/>
coming and every Tuesday night<lb/>
at 7 p m in Mendenhall room 221<lb/>
for fun and socializing Hope to<lb/>
see you there<lb/>
INTER-VARSITY<lb/>
inter Varsity will meet<lb/>
Wednesday night at 4:30 in<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium Our guest<lb/>
speaker's topic this week is<lb/>
"Giving Life and Talents to<lb/>
God" Come and fellowship with<lb/>
us.<lb/>
AEDPLEDGES<lb/>
All pledges for Alpha Epsiion<lb/>
Delta are required to attend the<lb/>
tour of the Brody Bldg on<lb/>
Thursday, Dec 8 Meet in the<lb/>
Brody Bldg Lobby promptly at<lb/>
10:00 am Call 752 5189 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
PIKAPP<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
So you had a nice but boring<lb/>
Thanksgiving Break Revive<lb/>
yourself by coming out tonight<lb/>
to papa Ketz for the PI Kapp<lb/>
Happy Hour. Cover charge is on<lb/>
ly II 00 and there are reduced<lb/>
prices Come out and party with<lb/>
the Pi Kapps<lb/>
To the Pledges: This is "Hell<lb/>
Week be prepared and know<lb/>
your stuff This is the week we<lb/>
find out how bad you really want<lb/>
to be Pi Kapps<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There will be a "special"<lb/>
general meeting for all Am-<lb/>
bassadors on Wednesday, Nov.<lb/>
30 at 5 p m. In Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center. Room 221.<lb/>
Members are especially en-<lb/>
couraged to attend as this will be<lb/>
our last official meeting of the<lb/>
semester<lb/>
CANDY CANE<lb/>
O'GRAMS<lb/>
Candy cane o'grams are com<lb/>
ingll The AOll's are sellfng<lb/>
giant candy canes.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
University student who enroll-<lb/>
ed before the first summer ses<lb/>
slon of 19t2 are reminded that. In<lb/>
accordance with University<lb/>
regulations, before they enroll<lb/>
for the first time in a foreign<lb/>
language that they studied in<lb/>
high school, they must take a<lb/>
placement examination in that<lb/>
language.<lb/>
All other students should con<lb/>
suit the current University<lb/>
catalogue, pages M 39<lb/>
Foreign language Placement<lb/>
Tests will be given Thursday,<lb/>
Dec 1, 19?3, as follows: French<lb/>
3:00 pm BD 304<lb/>
Spanish 3:00 pm BD 304<lb/>
German 3:15 p.m BD 307<lb/>
Latin 315 p.m BD 307<lb/>
Students intending to take a<lb/>
language placemtn test on Dec<lb/>
1 MUST REGISTER for it in the<lb/>
Foreign Language departmen<lb/>
tal office, Brewster A 431, ON<lb/>
OR BEFORE WEDNESDAY,<lb/>
NOV. 30.<lb/>
LANGUAGE PLACEMENT<lb/>
TESTS WILL NOT BE GIVEN<lb/>
ON REGISTRATION DAY OR<lb/>
DURING THE DROP?ADD<lb/>
PERIOD AT THE BEGINNING<lb/>
OF SPRING SEMESTER. 194<lb/>
Students not properly enrolled<lb/>
in a foreign language course will<lb/>
have to withdraw from the<lb/>
course<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS J Name<lb/>
CityState<lb/>
No. Lines-<lb/>
You may use the form at right i Address<lb/>
or use a separate sheet of -<lb/>
paper if you need more lines.<lb/>
There are 33 units per line.<lb/>
Each letter, punctuation mark<lb/>
and work space counts as one<lb/>
unit. Capitalize and hyphenate j<lb/>
words properly. Leave space<lb/>
at end of line if word doesn't fit.<lb/>
No ads will be accepted over<lb/>
the phone. We reserve the right<lb/>
to reiect any ad. All ads must<lb/>
be prepaid. Enclose 75 cents<lb/>
per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use<lb/>
capital and lower case letters.<lb/>
Return to the Media Board<lb/>
secretary by 3 p.m. the day<lb/>
before publication.<lb/>
Zap.<lb/>
?i 75 pci hue I.<lb/>
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11?!?H<lb/>
1 1 1<lb/>
1 11 I-? 1L.L.I<lb/>
RUB DOWN<lb/>
Need a good rub down? I The<lb/>
Physical Therapy Club will be<lb/>
giving massages Thursday,<lb/>
Dec 1 from 4:30 p.m to 9:30<lb/>
p.m. in the Allied Health<lb/>
building first floor. The cost is<lb/>
$1 00 tor a 10 minute massage.<lb/>
PART-TIME<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
14.75 an hour taking Inventory<lb/>
In stores within region. Informa-<lb/>
tion Meeting In Mendenhall 221<lb/>
on Monday, Dec 5, at 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
Team leaders and workers need<lb/>
ed. Mark you calendars If in-<lb/>
terested.<lb/>
A CHRISTMAS<lb/>
FANTASY<lb/>
Sunday, Dec 4 at 8 p.m. the<lb/>
ECU Sign Language Club will<lb/>
present "A Christmas<lb/>
Fantasy " We'll be singing all of<lb/>
your favorite Christmas Carols.<lb/>
It will be held at the Drama<lb/>
Studio next to McGlnnls<lb/>
Theatre. Admission is Free!<lb/>
Hop to see you there!<lb/>
ASPA<lb/>
The American Society for Per<lb/>
sonnel Adminlstraiton will hold<lb/>
its next meeting on Nov 30 at 3<lb/>
p.m. in Rawl Building room 204.<lb/>
The speaker will be the Vice<lb/>
President of Personnel at Pitt<lb/>
Memorial Hospital Everyone Is<lb/>
Invited to attend and all dues<lb/>
must be paid in full at this<lb/>
meeting. We are all looking tor<lb/>
ward to seeing you there!<lb/>
USHERS NEEDED<lb/>
Ushers needed! Signup to<lb/>
usher for "Album" In Messick<lb/>
(Theatre Arts) Building. Ushers<lb/>
need Dec 13 and 5-4.<lb/>
CAREERS<lb/>
The National Oceanic and At<lb/>
mospherlc Administration will<lb/>
have a representative on cam<lb/>
pus Dec 5. ECU students who<lb/>
might want a career studying<lb/>
the seas and the atmosphere<lb/>
might come and listen to a film<lb/>
in Brewster B 103 at 11 am or 2<lb/>
p.m. Please mark your calender<lb/>
If interested.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
DEMOCRATS<lb/>
Attention Deiadent<lb/>
Democrats and (turn staid<lb/>
Republicans?) There will be a<lb/>
meeting to discuss our upcom<lb/>
ing social and speakers. We'll<lb/>
need new members to help with<lb/>
logistics of our upcoming<lb/>
events We will meet in on<lb/>
Thursday Dec 1 in Mendenhall<lb/>
room 238 at 7:30 pm Bring a<lb/>
friend!<lb/>
FRISBEECLUB<lb/>
When a ball dreams it dreams<lb/>
its a frisbee Ultimate Tuesday,<lb/>
Thursday and Sunday at 3 p m<lb/>
College Hill Drive Frisbee Club<lb/>
will meet tonight in Mendenhall<lb/>
room 248 a' 9 P m Be there or be<lb/>
oblong<lb/>
IFCMEETING<lb/>
There will be an inter<lb/>
Fraternity Council meeting at 5<lb/>
p.m. in room 221 Mendenhall to-<lb/>
day Officers for next year will<lb/>
be elected. Everyone be present<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Campus Alcohol and Drug prty<lb/>
gram Tuesday Nov 29 in 210 Er<lb/>
win Hall All interested persons<lb/>
are invited to attend<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
FEMALES<lb/>
We are now accepting appiica<lb/>
tions from female student for<lb/>
housing for spring quarter at the<lb/>
Methodist Sutdent Center and<lb/>
Wesley House if you are in-<lb/>
terested, stop by the office at 501<lb/>
East Fifth Street between 9 00<lb/>
am. 2X p m or phone at<lb/>
758 2030<lb/>
ZETA<lb/>
PHI BETA<lb/>
The Lambda Mu Chapter of<lb/>
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority will be<lb/>
having a BAKE SALE in front of<lb/>
the bookstore today from 9 ?<lb/>
p.m. until 4-00 p.m The sorority<lb/>
will also be having a COIN<lb/>
DRIVE tor a needy Haitian<lb/>
family Your support will be ap<lb/>
predated<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus commune<lb/>
nnct I92<lb/>
Published ever 'u?v!?.<lb/>
and Thursday during Hn<lb/>
academic year and ever,<lb/>
Wednesday during it?jU"<lb/>
mer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is 'he<lb/>
official newspaper of Eas'<lb/>
Carolina University, owned<lb/>
operated, and published y<lb/>
and by the students of Eas'<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Subscription Rate SM yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian oficet<lb/>
are located w? the Old South<lb/>
Building on me cempui of<lb/>
ECU Greenville. N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send ec <lb/>
dress changes 'o The Ef<lb/>
Carolinian. O'd Sou"<lb/>
Building. ECU Greenv He<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone TV ?J? O'<lb/>
?309<lb/>
KNOX'84<lb/>
On Thursday Dec 1 at 5 p.m<lb/>
there win be an organizational<lb/>
meeting to form a student group<lb/>
to support the candidacy of Ed<lb/>
die Knox tor governor of North<lb/>
Carolina See Thursday's paper<lb/>
for meeting place or call Chris<lb/>
at 355 4410 tor more info<lb/>
GAMMA<lb/>
BETA PHI<lb/>
The next general meeting of<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi win be held on<lb/>
Dec I, at 7 p.m. in Jenkins Art<lb/>
Auditorium Please attend!<lb/>
Final Plans for the inductions<lb/>
ceremony will be announced<lb/>
double-spaced, typed statement<lb/>
of goals as an English malor (4)<lb/>
submit the names of two pro-<lb/>
fessors who are willing to<lb/>
recommend you. (5) submit a<lb/>
completed application form,<lb/>
available at the department of<lb/>
flee.<lb/>
The deadline for application is<lb/>
Monday. January 9, 1984. All<lb/>
materials should be addressed<lb/>
to the Student Services Commit<lb/>
tee. UBE Scholarship, and turn<lb/>
ed in to the Department of<lb/>
English. Austin 124.<lb/>
For more Information, con-<lb/>
tact: Dr. Joyce Pettls, Chair,<lb/>
Student Services Committee<lb/>
English Department<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now<lb/>
Accepting Applications For<lb/>
News Writers and Editors<lb/>
Apply in person at The East Carolinian offices on<lb/>
the second floor of the Publications Building,<lb/>
across from the entrance of Joyner Library.<lb/>
512 E. 14th Street<lb/>
n hirwks West of Mens Dorms)<lb/>
1AM-8PM<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
Vegetables, Bread, Tea,<lb/>
and 1 meat<lb/>
$3.85 tax<lb/>
Daily Special $1.99 tea tax<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
752-0476<lb/>
<lb/>
s-<lb/>
Z$fS$j.<lb/>
TWO<lb/>
to<lb/>
"LAS VEGAS"<lb/>
t3 Days, 2 Nights)<lb/>
Sigma Nu and the<lb/>
PRESENTS<lb/>
Ladies Lock-in<lb/>
FEA TURING<lb/>
A MALE STRIPPER<lb/>
While Ordering Your<lb/>
Official ECU Class Ring<lb/>
Door Prizes<lb/>
The Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
Quicksilver Records<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Plain Jane's<lb/>
Marsh's Surf-n-Sea<lb/>
For Heads Only<lb/>
Bonds-Hodges Sporting Goods<lb/>
Date - Tonight<lb/>
8:30 ? Ladies Lock-in<lb/>
9:30 -Male Stripper<lb/>
10:30 - Men Admitted<lb/>
11:30- Door Prizes<lb/>
DATE: Dec. lit2nd TlME:9:00-4:00p.m<lb/>
PLACE:<lb/>
Student Supply Store - Wright Building<lb/>
9<lb/>
HBRFF JONES<lb/>
Division of Carnation Company<lb/>
Check Our Low Prices on ALL Official styles!<lb/>
'Hint tmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
? ??.? ?<lb/>
4 ?? ? n " ' "<lb/>
 ? J<lb/>
Space Sh<lb/>
Rockets I<lb/>
Orbit; Ne<lb/>
Mission<lb/>
UPI NEWS AT A C<lb/>
CAPE CANAVERAL<lb/>
shuttle Columbia rocket ec<lb/>
preliminary orbit Mondaj<lb/>
new $1 billion European-<lb/>
research station and a rec<lb/>
on a nine-day mission to<lb/>
of experiments. Flight i<lb/>
Young reported all was e<lb/>
rocket freighter passed K<lb/>
foundland<lb/>
TOKYO ? Prime Mi<lb/>
Nakasone dissolved Japar<lb/>
of parliament Monda<lb/>
with the opposition, fo I<lb/>
tions Dec. 18 and putti<lb/>
government to its fir j<lb/>
test, following the 0<lb/>
tion of former Prime<lb/>
Tanaka.<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
and Israeli Prime Mmiste:<lb/>
conferred Monday on a i<lb/>
an administration of' <lb/>
to closer strategic militi<lb/>
between the two countri<lb/>
suggested the new relatioi<lb/>
ly from "the increase i<lb/>
and assertiveness<lb/>
MEJORADA DEL C<lb/>
Investigators today orl<lb/>
charred bodies and deter:<lb/>
ombian jumbo jet flipped j<lb/>
ed into a hillside in flam<lb/>
airport, killing 185 peot<lb/>
ficials expressed hope<lb/>
flight recorder recover<lb/>
provide some answers<lb/>
WASHINGTON -<lb/>
announced Monday it<lb/>
American tourists ma<lb/>
Cuba ? a law the Reagj<lb/>
says is important to<lb/>
ings with enemy nationj<lb/>
agreed to examine a<lb/>
troom use of material r<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
CHICAGO -Aw<lb/>
millions of ThanksgiMnl<lb/>
highway and contributf<lb/>
traffic death count that<lb/>
people, according to a<lb/>
national count early M<lb/>
had the most traffic<lb/>
followed by Florida wi<lb/>
with 21.<lb/>
ST. LOUIS - Ali<lb/>
U.S. Circuit Court of<lb/>
the landmark metro<lb/>
school desegregation a<lb/>
hearing including an<lb/>
hours of oral argument<lb/>
torney general claim?<lb/>
state to pay most oi thj<lb/>
BONN, West Germ<lb/>
Chancellor Helmut KoJ<lb/>
received a letter from<lb/>
Andropov indicatinj<lb/>
return to the Geneva<lb/>
United States. Kohl si<lb/>
letter was a signal the<lb/>
contribute to the c<lb/>
weaoons.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ?j<lb/>
Lavelle trial Monday<lb/>
videotape of the fi1<lb/>
testimony to congress<lb/>
this year. Miss LaveB<lb/>
perjury and obstructinj<lb/>
vestigation into the<lb/>
waste cleanup prograij<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
Federal Trade Commil<lb/>
his agency to decide wf<lb/>
joint proposal by<lb/>
Toyota to build a ne<lb/>
federal anti-trust stati<lb/>
James Miller also saj<lb/>
participate in the case<lb/>
NEW YORK ? Tt<lb/>
ed from a three-weel<lb/>
prices heading slightlj<lb/>
active post-Thanksgij<lb/>
mining stocks were stl<lb/>
soared on internatioif<lb/>
ing the weekend theft<lb/>
worth of gold bars u<lb/>
SCOTTSDALE,<lb/>
drilled a 5-foot bin<lb/>
17th hole worth $15C<lb/>
in history and a<lb/>
$170,000 in the $3<lb/>
Saturday at Desej<lb/>
Course. Arnold Pi<lb/>
and picked up a ch<lb/>
WEATHER<lb/>
dumped up to 2 f<lb/>
Rockies to the Missi<lb/>
fk across much of tl<lb/>
moved into the Gr<lb/>
people died in acci<lb/>
storm that first hit<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
init aiC<lb/>
V.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057593_0003"/><lb/>
rom.<lb/>
-4J?-??"?e<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
!<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
T 1?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
w East Carolinian<lb/>
 fl? during fhe<lb/>
KM " .(? and every<lb/>
W?. o r "o ?n? ?om<lb/>
?Si aroimian ? ?n?<lb/>
?fioo?f o East<lb/>
-a jn ,p-s fv ownec<lb/>
ana published for<lb/>
"e 5'udents o? East<lb/>
- j r<lb/>
? ?osci rMee Bate IN yearly<lb/>
?e Eait Carolinian offices<lb/>
Irt xa?eJ in me Old Souttt<lb/>
i. ding on tne campus of<lb/>
Oreenyiiie N C<lb/>
MASTED Send ad<lb/>
?  ?- The Ess'<lb/>
Old South<lb/>
I Veenville.<lb/>
c o?one '57 ?4 ?J7<lb/>
KIM6<lb/>
irms)<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
752-0476<lb/>
ea,<lb/>
ax<lb/>
1<lb/>
ing<lb/>
ONES<lb/>
irion Company<lb/>
styles!<lb/>
Space Shuttle<lb/>
Rockets Into<lb/>
Orbit; New<lb/>
Mission Begins<lb/>
UPI NEWS AT A GLANCE<lb/>
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Space<lb/>
shuttle Columbia rocketed smoothly into a<lb/>
preliminary orbit Monday carrying the<lb/>
new $1 billion European-built Spacelab<lb/>
research station and a record crew of six<lb/>
on a nine-day mission to conduct dozens<lb/>
of experiments. Flight commander John<lb/>
Young reported all was well as the winged<lb/>
rocket freighter passed 82 miles over New-<lb/>
foundland.<lb/>
TOKYO ? Prime Minister Yasuhiro<lb/>
Nakasone dissolved Japan's lower house<lb/>
of parliament Monday in a compromise<lb/>
with the opposition, forcing general elec-<lb/>
tions Dec. 18 and putting his year-old<lb/>
government to its first crucial popularity<lb/>
test, following the Oct. 12 bribery convic-<lb/>
tion of former Prime Minister Kakuei<lb/>
Tanaka.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? President Reagan<lb/>
and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir<lb/>
conferred Monda on a long agenda that<lb/>
an administration official said could lead<lb/>
to closer strategic military cooperation<lb/>
between the two countries. The official<lb/>
suggested the new relationship stems part-<lb/>
ly from "the increase in Syrian strength<lb/>
and assertiveness<lb/>
MEJORADA DEL CAMPO, Spain ?<lb/>
Investigators today worked to identify<lb/>
charred bodies and determine why a Col-<lb/>
ombian jumbo jet flipped over and slamm-<lb/>
ed into a hillside in flames near the Madrid<lb/>
airport, killing 185 people. Aviation of-<lb/>
ficials expressed hope the "black box"<lb/>
flight recorder recovered Sunday would<lb/>
provide some answers.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? The Supreme Court<lb/>
announced Monday it will decide whether<lb/>
American tourists may travel freely to<lb/>
Cuba ? a law the Reagan administration<lb/>
says is important to its foreign policy deal-<lb/>
ings with enemy nations. The court also<lb/>
agreed to examine a rule barring cour-<lb/>
troom use of ma'erial police gather illegal-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
CHICAGO ? A winter storm caught<lb/>
millions of Thanksgiving travelers on the<lb/>
highway and contributed to the holiday<lb/>
traffic death count that rose to at least 345<lb/>
people, according to a United Press Inter-<lb/>
national count early Monday. California<lb/>
had the most traffic deaths with 48,<lb/>
followed by Florida with 26 and Texas<lb/>
with 21.<lb/>
ST. LOUIS ? All 10 judges of the 8th<lb/>
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals will decide<lb/>
the landmark metropolitan St. Louis<lb/>
school desegregation case after an unusual<lb/>
hearing including an extraordinary two<lb/>
hours of oral arguments. The Missouri at-<lb/>
torney general claims the plan forces the<lb/>
state to pay most of the plan's costs.<lb/>
BONN, West Germany ? West German<lb/>
Chancellor Helmut Kohl said Monday he<lb/>
received a letter from Soviet leader Yuri<lb/>
Andropov indicating Moscow might<lb/>
return to the Geneva arms talks with the<lb/>
United States. Kohl said he thought the<lb/>
letter was a signal the Soviets still want to<lb/>
contribute to the control of nuclear<lb/>
weaDons.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? The jury in the Rita<lb/>
Lavelle trial Monday viewed a 90-minute<lb/>
videotape of the fired EPA official's<lb/>
testimony to congressional panels earlier<lb/>
this year. Miss Lavelle faces charges of<lb/>
perjury and obstructing a congressional in-<lb/>
vestigation into the EPA's Superfund<lb/>
waste cleanup program.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? The head of the<lb/>
Federal Trade Commission says he expects<lb/>
his agency to decide within two months if a<lb/>
joint proposal by General Motors and<lb/>
Toyota to build a new line of cars violates<lb/>
federal anti-trust statutes. FTC Chairman<lb/>
James Miller also says he has a duty to<lb/>
participate in the case.<lb/>
NEW YORK ? The stock market paus-<lb/>
ed from a three-week rally Monday with<lb/>
prices heading slightly lower in moderately<lb/>
active post-Thanksgiving trading. Gold-<lb/>
mining stocks were strong as bullion prices<lb/>
soared on international exchanges follow-<lb/>
ing the weekend theft of nearly $40 million<lb/>
worth of gold bars in London.<lb/>
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. ? Gary Player<lb/>
drilled a 5-foot birdie putt on the par-5<lb/>
17th hole worth $150,000, the richest putt<lb/>
in history and a take-home pay of<lb/>
$170,000 in the $360,000 "Skins Game"<lb/>
Saturday at Desert Highlands Golf<lb/>
Course. Arnold Palmer finished second<lb/>
and picked up a check for $140,000.<lb/>
WEATHER MAP ? A blizzard that<lb/>
dumped up to 2 feet of snow from the<lb/>
Rockies to the Mississippi, paralyzed traf-<lb/>
fic across much of the Plains Monday and<lb/>
moved into the Great Lakes. At least 17<lb/>
people died in accidents blamed on the<lb/>
storm that first hit the Pacific Northwest<lb/>
Thursday. <lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 29, 1983<lb/>
Operation Santa Claus Campaign In Process<lb/>
By JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
The Pitt County<lb/>
Mental Health<lb/>
Association has begun<lb/>
its annual Operation<lb/>
Santa Claus Cam-<lb/>
paign. The purpose of<lb/>
the campaign is to col-<lb/>
lect gifts and money<lb/>
for patients at Cherry<lb/>
Hospital in<lb/>
Goldsboro, residents<lb/>
at the Caswell Centei<lb/>
for the mentally<lb/>
retarded in Kinston<lb/>
and various agencies<lb/>
throughout the coun-<lb/>
ty which work with<lb/>
the needy.<lb/>
"There are no state<lb/>
funds that provide<lb/>
gifts for patients<lb/>
said Brenda Gray, the<lb/>
executive director of<lb/>
the Mental Health<lb/>
Association. "We do<lb/>
this program to make<lb/>
sure they are not<lb/>
forgotten at<lb/>
Christmas she said.<lb/>
ECU's residence<lb/>
halls, fraternities and<lb/>
sororities are suppor-<lb/>
ting the program and<lb/>
have done so in the<lb/>
past. Last year all 15<lb/>
residence halls and a<lb/>
dozen fraternities and<lb/>
sororities contributed.<lb/>
"The campus itself<lb/>
has been very suppor-<lb/>
tive Gray said.<lb/>
The Mental Health<lb/>
Association is funded<lb/>
through United Way<lb/>
and contributions of<lb/>
its members. The<lb/>
Operation Santa<lb/>
Claus Campaign was<lb/>
first instituted in Pitt<lb/>
County in 1958 and<lb/>
has received much<lb/>
praise for its work in<lb/>
bringing Christmas<lb/>
joy to people who<lb/>
have to spend the<lb/>
holidays in institu-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Mrs. Zula Rouse of<lb/>
Greenville is the Pitt<lb/>
County chairwoman<lb/>
of this year's drive.<lb/>
Mrs. Gladys Howell,<lb/>
the wife of ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John<lb/>
Howell, has<lb/>
volunteered to be the<lb/>
honorary chairwoman<lb/>
for the drive.<lb/>
This is Howell's se-<lb/>
cond year as<lb/>
hono'raary chair-<lb/>
woman. Her job, she<lb/>
said, is to try to in-<lb/>
terest the community<lb/>
in the project, rather<lb/>
than doing actual<lb/>
soliciting. She will ap-<lb/>
pear on local televi-<lb/>
sion stations with<lb/>
Rouse to promote the<lb/>
campaign. A kickoff<lb/>
tea was also held at<lb/>
her residence. "We<lb/>
had a great number of<lb/>
student volunteers<lb/>
who came to the<lb/>
reception and who<lb/>
have been very<lb/>
helpful she said.<lb/>
Suggestions for<lb/>
gifts include clothing,<lb/>
records and games.<lb/>
Cash donations are<lb/>
also accepted. The<lb/>
gifts are divided ac-<lb/>
cording to ?ap-<lb/>
propriate age-groups<lb/>
and patient needs.<lb/>
Cash donations are<lb/>
useful, Gray said,<lb/>
because "patients<lb/>
may ask for particular<lb/>
gifts and we try to<lb/>
make sure they receive<lb/>
one that is on their<lb/>
list<lb/>
Another program<lb/>
the MHC offers is and<lb/>
adoption program for<lb/>
"forgotten patients<lb/>
Individuals and<lb/>
groups are invited to<lb/>
participate in the pro-<lb/>
gram in order to pro-<lb/>
vide spending money<lb/>
for these patients.<lb/>
Gray said that several<lb/>
groups from ECU<lb/>
have sponsored pa-<lb/>
tients in the past.<lb/>
Anyone ishing<lb/>
more infc. nation<lb/>
about Operation San-<lb/>
ta Claus or the adop-<lb/>
tion program is asked<lb/>
to call the Mental<lb/>
Health Association at<lb/>
752-7448.<lb/>
Schools Paying More To Attract Professors<lb/>
Cont'd From Page 1 linois. "Our money lost 12 faculty posi- frame over which it tions to meet evaluate their course sity, for exa-<lb/>
just doesn't buy as tions over the past was created he said, demands. offering in term, nf lost 10<lb/>
Cont'd From Page 1<lb/>
earn more than<lb/>
veteran faculty<lb/>
members in other<lb/>
departments, a situa-<lb/>
tion that causes<lb/>
morale problems.<lb/>
"We haven't been<lb/>
cutting dollars for<lb/>
faculty, but we<lb/>
haven't been able to<lb/>
keep pace with the in-<lb/>
crease in salaries<lb/>
laments Vernon Zim-<lb/>
merman, dean of the<lb/>
College of Commerce<lb/>
and Business Ad-<lb/>
ministration at Il-<lb/>
linois. "Our<lb/>
just doesn't<lb/>
much<lb/>
Zimmerman used<lb/>
to hire beginning ac-<lb/>
counting instructors<lb/>
for $20,000. "In the<lb/>
next year he says,<lb/>
"it will be $36,000 to<lb/>
$38,000. If we don't<lb/>
pay it, other schools<lb/>
or industry will hire<lb/>
our people. The ero-<lb/>
sion of our faculty<lb/>
comes because the<lb/>
same number of<lb/>
dollars won't buy as<lb/>
many teachers<lb/>
Illinois, he says, has<lb/>
lost 12 faculty posi-<lb/>
tions over the past<lb/>
five years because it<lb/>
can't fund them.<lb/>
"We just don't<lb/>
have the faculty or the<lb/>
classroom space" to<lb/>
accommodate all the<lb/>
students who want to<lb/>
take the "meal<lb/>
ticket" courses,<lb/>
Berkeley's<lb/>
said. "And we don't<lb/>
have the faculty<lb/>
because we don't have<lb/>
the money<lb/>
"The severity of the<lb/>
problem is new<lb/>
because of the time<lb/>
frame over which it<lb/>
was created he said.<lb/>
"In the past, interest<lb/>
in certain majors<lb/>
developed gradually.<lb/>
But interest in these<lb/>
subjects has grown up<lb/>
over a period of three<lb/>
or four years. We<lb/>
haven't had time to<lb/>
find facilities and<lb/>
Sprecher recruit faculty<lb/>
Peltason thinks<lb/>
facilities and lack of<lb/>
equipment may be<lb/>
one of the most im-<lb/>
portant reasons<lb/>
schools can't create<lb/>
enough course sec-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
demands.<lb/>
"Equipment pre<lb/>
blems are serious n.<lb/>
science classes he<lb/>
said. "If laboratory<lb/>
equipment is old-<lb/>
fashioned or obsolete,<lb/>
that affects courses<lb/>
For whatever<lb/>
reasons ? equipment,<lb/>
faculty shortages or<lb/>
some combination of<lb/>
the two ? J.D. Con-<lb/>
nor of the Association<lb/>
of College Registrars<lb/>
and Admissions Of-<lb/>
ficers find "many<lb/>
schools are having to<lb/>
evaluate their course<lb/>
offerings in terms of<lb/>
lume<lb/>
Some are doing<lb/>
more re-evaluating<lb/>
than others. Private<lb/>
colleges, which are<lb/>
generally more flexi-<lb/>
ble and can more<lb/>
readily tap endow-<lb/>
ment funds, seem less<lb/>
drastically affected by<lb/>
the shift in course de-<lb/>
mand.<lb/>
But public colleges<lb/>
in depressed areas are<lb/>
having probably the<lb/>
worst time coping.<lb/>
West Virginia Univer-<lb/>
sity, for exa<lb/>
lost 106<lb/>
members ir<lb/>
year, largel<lb/>
it didn't ha<lb/>
money to oft<lb/>
'e, has<lb/>
ulty<lb/>
past<lb/>
-cause<lb/>
e the<lb/>
r com-<lb/>
petitive salaries, Kid-<lb/>
der said.<lb/>
West Virginia's<lb/>
course shortages,<lb/>
moreover, run deeper<lb/>
than the "meal<lb/>
ticket" classes, he<lb/>
adds. The school has<lb/>
had to cancel classes<lb/>
in such basic<lb/>
freshman courses as<lb/>
psychology and<lb/>
English composition.<lb/>
S<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
t<lb/>
Bousch &amp; Lomb<lb/>
Soft Contacts<lb/>
$59.00<lb/>
?<lb/>
l$15.00 OFF ANY COMPLETE I<lb/>
PAIR OF EYE GLASSES<lb/>
Must present this ad for discount.<lb/>
w1' 1 .IIIAltdtMIS-<lb/>
ll 1  1 X.llll<lb/>
1 IM N111 1 M<lb/>
lit S.tHlf )<lb/>
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EVERYDAY<lb/>
SUPER MAPPY HOURS<lb/>
WED. and ITRI.<lb/>
4:00 ? S:00 2SC DRAFT<lb/>
WE LEAVE THE<lb/>
DRINKING TO<lb/>
YOU"<lb/>
"LEAVE THE<lb/>
DRIVING TO US.<lb/>
"SUPPORT THE<lb/>
S.G.A. BUS"<lb/>
a<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
LADIES MGH1<lb/>
with<lb/>
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ClIICEFRYrj<lb/>
Gesst<lb/>
hlemmg<lb/>
Engitsh Ame<lb/>
OTA A the Hilt<lb/>
CollegeHiU <lb/>
Stratford Anm Apt<lb/>
Hargett's Drug<lb/>
Home Federal<lb/>
Safierktmr<lb/>
'0 after home<lb/>
I! after Hour<lb/>
15 after mow<lb/>
houe<lb/>
1 nl tear<lb/>
m<lb/>
Umn. Cortdo 10 mjtr'<lb/>
Camtom Comet. 12 afte<lb/>
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 illtat' Green . 2? til<lb/>
College yr? 24 nl<lb/>
Cypress 23tMi<lb/>
HomeFadermi 15 til hour<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057593_0004"/><lb/>
OHie Eaat (Harultinan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Hunter Fisher. g??w<lb/>
Darryl Brown. ???&amp;??<lb/>
J T. PlETRZAK. Doctor of AdvtrnsiHs ClNDY PLEASANTS. Sports Editor<lb/>
Robert Rucks. Bust ?J)WKf Greg Rideout. Editor pa Editor<lb/>
ALI AFRASHTEH. Ok Wr- GORDON IPOCK, Enttrtaimment Editor<lb/>
Geoff Hudson, omwm towi?r Lizanne Jennings, so ????<lb/>
Michael Mayo. r?i??isupervaor ToddEvans, product??<lb/>
November 29, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Government<lb/>
Rental System Rightly Checked<lb/>
H ty seems to be the trend in<lb/>
all le s of government these days.<lb/>
Congressional reforms hit the<lb/>
books in the '70s. Controls on the<lb/>
executive bureaucracy have carried<lb/>
on through the '80s. And, with the<lb/>
creation of a board to oversee the<lb/>
dealings of the Refrigerator Rental<lb/>
System, the Student Government<lb/>
Association of ECU can be added<lb/>
to the list.<lb/>
During the past decade, the ren-<lb/>
tal system has been plagued by<lb/>
mismanagement and, in some<lb/>
cases, outright fraud. State<lb/>
auditors were even pouring over<lb/>
the books at one time.<lb/>
Refrigerators have been lost and<lb/>
allegedly given away in return for<lb/>
personal favors. One count, accor-<lb/>
ding to a high-placed SGA official,<lb/>
put at 94 the number unaccounted<lb/>
for during one manager's tenure.<lb/>
Reasons for the dubious record<lb/>
of the rental system can be traced<lb/>
to the fact the manager had no one<lb/>
to answer to for his actions. He<lb/>
uas appointed by the SGA presi-<lb/>
dent and allowed to go on his<lb/>
merry way. The manager, in other<lb/>
words, set policy and then ad-<lb/>
ministered it. There may have been<lb/>
guidelines he was supposed to<lb/>
operate by, but without a check on<lb/>
his actions, he could almost ignore<lb/>
them. And the facts show some<lb/>
managers did.<lb/>
The board the SGA created<lb/>
eliminates this problem. When<lb/>
January rolls around, the board<lb/>
will be able to make guidelines for<lb/>
the revenue generated, and the<lb/>
manager must abide by them. The<lb/>
present manager, Tory Russo,<lb/>
helped to establish the board.<lb/>
Credit should go to him and other<lb/>
SGA officials for their foresight.<lb/>
Russo's style of management did<lb/>
not need such a board. But, as all<lb/>
followers of politics know, it takes<lb/>
someone who needs reform least to<lb/>
advocate it.<lb/>
And, as if the board weren't<lb/>
enough, the makers of the govern-<lb/>
ing body have put in a provision<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
that their recommendation of how<lb/>
to spend excess rental revenue be<lb/>
approved by the Legislature. This<lb/>
step will prevent little cliques of<lb/>
power hungry SGAers from con-<lb/>
trolling the rental show in the<lb/>
future. This, of course, is not the<lb/>
case now. But, as observers of the<lb/>
SGA scene for the past few years<lb/>
know, a situation like it can<lb/>
become a reality very quickly. The<lb/>
provision shows considerable<lb/>
political savvy.<lb/>
The Refrigerator Rental System<lb/>
generates all of its revenue through<lb/>
its renting of refrigerators and the<lb/>
use of copying machines. No stu-<lb/>
dent funds are given to it. The<lb/>
system could use the money to fur-<lb/>
ther its own ends. But, under the<lb/>
guidance of Russo, money has<lb/>
been used to finance the downtown<lb/>
bus shuttle project and Pirate<lb/>
Walk jackets.<lb/>
These deeds are commendable,<lb/>
and with the help of the board<lb/>
from January on, we are sure the<lb/>
money will be used for other wor-<lb/>
thwhile student projects. Maybe an<lb/>
expansion of rental services could<lb/>
be in order.<lb/>
We feel whatever is done with<lb/>
the money will be the right thing.<lb/>
Becuase of the healthy set of<lb/>
checks and balances being im-<lb/>
plemented in true democratic<lb/>
form, money and refrigerators will<lb/>
end up in the right hands. No<lb/>
system of government should be<lb/>
allowed to exist without a check on<lb/>
a powerful position. We applaud<lb/>
the Legislature. Its members have<lb/>
done the right thing. Students<lb/>
should be glad to know that good<lb/>
government is alive and well on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Good Afternoon<lb/>
Nothing could be as funny as an<lb/>
ECU student trying to pack for<lb/>
Thanksgiving Break. One student,<lb/>
rumor has it, in a rush to get home,<lb/>
actually packed his books. It's the<lb/>
truth.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 -<lb/>
awoNe say?<lb/>
JHeseiscrOre<lb/>
aasses are<lb/>
eemNGToo<lb/>
crtwDeDj<lb/>
r?<lb/>
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r7S5a?r? G??vVhgaftiy? k<lb/>
iV ?<lb/>
a- i o"t<lb/>
State Secrets Land In Jail<lb/>
Under the "No one is perfect" rule,<lb/>
the State Department sent over a file<lb/>
cabinet full of top-secret papers to the<lb/>
Lorton Reformatory in Virginia. Lorton<lb/>
has a contract with the department to<lb/>
repair Foggy Bottom's furniture, but the<lb/>
State Department rules say the files are<lb/>
supposed to be empty before they leave<lb/>
the building.<lb/>
You can imagine the excitement at<lb/>
Lorton when one of the inmates opened<lb/>
up the cabinet and discovered it fully<lb/>
loaded with the innermost secrets of our<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Art Buchwald<lb/>
"Hey, guys, look here. There's a<lb/>
bunch of papers in this cabinet<lb/>
"I'll be damned. What kind of<lb/>
papers?"<lb/>
"Don't know. This file says 'For Eyes<lb/>
Only What does that mean?"<lb/>
"Guess it means you supposed to read<lb/>
it. What are your eyes for? Here, give<lb/>
me that. Man, this is hot stuff. It looks<lb/>
like a telegram from some State Depart-<lb/>
ment cat asking for $50 million to buy<lb/>
off some dude in Central America who<lb/>
wants to knock off another dude who's<lb/>
running the country<lb/>
"Here's another one. It's marked<lb/>
'Top Secret, Return After Reading It's<lb/>
a letter from the Secretary of State to a<lb/>
dame named Margaret Thatcher telling<lb/>
her how to fuse a cruise missile. What's<lb/>
a cruise missile?"<lb/>
"Beats me. Let me see what else they<lb/>
got in there. This one says they broke the<lb/>
diplomatic code of Bulgaria and they<lb/>
know the order of battle of the Warsaw<lb/>
Pact nations<lb/>
"Boy, this stuff is boring. It don't<lb/>
have anything in there about how we can.<lb/>
break out of here, does it?"<lb/>
"Don't expect so. They got lots of<lb/>
maps of prisons in foreign countries<lb/>
showing how the prisoners can break out<lb/>
from there, but none for Lorton<lb/>
"What's in that confidential folder?"<lb/>
"Just a bunch of stuff about death<lb/>
squads knocking off the peasants, and<lb/>
how to handle it if the press stans asking<lb/>
too many question<lb/>
"You mean they're cooling it when it<lb/>
comes to death squads in other coun-<lb/>
tries?"<lb/>
"Sure looks like it<lb/>
"Then why am I doing 20 years for<lb/>
just shooting my wife's boyfriend?"<lb/>
"State Department don't get involved<lb/>
with what we do in this country. They<lb/>
just supposed to protect criminals in<lb/>
other countries from going to jail<lb/>
"Hey, Jeeter, you used to work in the<lb/>
government before you heisted the credit<lb/>
union. You think this stuff got anv value<lb/>
for us?"<lb/>
"It sure does. When they find out<lb/>
their files are missing, they're going to<lb/>
go ape until they get them back. What I<lb/>
suggest we do is divvy up the top-secret<lb/>
folders amongst ourselves and then deal<lb/>
with them<lb/>
"How do you mean deal?"<lb/>
"Well, let's say I'll give them back<lb/>
their plans for supplying the rebels in<lb/>
Nicaragua, if they take five years off my<lb/>
sentence<lb/>
SOMETIMES ?ff NOT<lb/>
"Maybe they'll give us five vcars more<lb/>
for having the top-secret folders m our<lb/>
possession<lb/>
"They won't if we tell them we'll bio<lb/>
the whistle to '60 Minutes' on what the<lb/>
State Department really thinks of Pierre<lb/>
Trudeau<lb/>
"Is that in the files?"<lb/>
"It's right here in this top-secret<lb/>
folder on psvehiatric profiles of heads of<lb/>
state<lb/>
"Hey, man, give me a real good one I<lb/>
got a parole hearing coming up soon,<lb/>
and if I give them back something they<lb/>
really need, the secretary of state might<lb/>
appear himself to recommend it<lb/>
"Sure, Shorty. Here's a game plan on<lb/>
how the State Department is going to<lb/>
shaft the secretary of defense with the<lb/>
White House. They'll do anything to get<lb/>
that one back. Don't shove, there's<lb/>
enough to go around for everybody, but<lb/>
hide them good because they're going to<lb/>
tear this joint apart to find them "<lb/>
"Hey, we forgot something We're<lb/>
supposed to repair this cabinet<lb/>
"Don't give it no mind. No one at the<lb/>
State Department is ever going to want<lb/>
to see the outside of this cabinet again<lb/>
?l 1MJ. lot Vngetet Tubo Svixiicau<lb/>
Ed Page 'Uncluttered By Fact Cluttered By Dolts, Clods<lb/>
As usual, I was pleased to recieve<lb/>
(sic) the latest edition of The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Being absent from the<lb/>
University, the E.C. is of special in-<lb/>
terest to me in its theraputic (sic) value<lb/>
for treating seperation (sic) anxiety.<lb/>
But I am disappointed that the paper is<lb/>
slipping into the hands of dolts and<lb/>
clods. All idealogical (sic) considera-<lb/>
tions aside, the E.C. has fired one of its<lb/>
strongest writers and most able<lb/>
newsmen. Patrick O'Neill, for all his<lb/>
decidely liberalprogressive ideals and<lb/>
strong commitments to expression, was<lb/>
a capable writer with a respect for fact,<lb/>
though perhaps a flair for colorful<lb/>
elaboration. Patrick would research a<lb/>
topic not familiar to him.<lb/>
So who stays on as editorial page<lb/>
edi'or? Greg Rideout, who, I reiterate,<lb/>
is . clod. Why he felt called to remark<lb/>
on something he apparently knew<lb/>
nothing about; i.e. erronously (sic) in-<lb/>
forming us that Jesse Jackson is the<lb/>
first Black (sic) to seek nomination to<lb/>
the Presidency (sic) (Nov.l) is beyond<lb/>
me. Hell, if he had been alive in 1976,<lb/>
he would have at least heard about it.<lb/>
Do you remember Shirley Chisolm?<lb/>
(Editor's Note: Chisolm ran in 1972<lb/>
not 1976.)<lb/>
I write this letter to question the opi-<lb/>
nions on the editorial page, which from<lb/>
some indications is falling into the<lb/>
genre of uninformed rhetoric from the<lb/>
minds of dolts with brains uncluttered<lb/>
by fact.<lb/>
Larry Martin<lb/>
Alumnus<lb/>
(Editor's Note: Thank you for your<lb/>
constructive criticism, Larry. Inciden-<lb/>
tally, the editorial read, Jackson<lb/>
wants to be president. And Sunday, he<lb/>
said he plans to officially announce his<lb/>
quest for the Democratic nomination<lb/>
on Thursday, trying to make himself<lb/>
the first black ever nominated for the<lb/>
nation's highest office)<lb/>
Grenada Again<lb/>
Thank you for printing the correc<lb/>
tion to your story about an on-campus<lb/>
action three weeks ago concerning the<lb/>
Grenada invasion. Until two Fridays<lb/>
ago, the Greenville Peace Committee<lb/>
took no position on the U.S. action.<lb/>
The group recognizes and expresses<lb/>
strong reasons for and strong reasons<lb/>
against the military invasion and tem-<lb/>
porary occupation of Grenada. While,<lb/>
on the basis of available information,<lb/>
our conclusion is that the U.S. action<lb/>
was a serious mistake, in my opinion<lb/>
taking no action at all might also have<lb/>
been a mistake. Imaginative, informed<lb/>
diplomatic and economic alternatives<lb/>
were needed.<lb/>
Carroll Webber<lb/>
Greenville Peace Committee<lb/>
Good Moving<lb/>
Please allow me to take this oppor-<lb/>
tunity to applaude the decision to<lb/>
remove Pat O'Neill from the staff of<lb/>
The East Carolinian. It seems to me<lb/>
that a university newspaper should be<lb/>
used primarily to hone the talents of<lb/>
STUDENTS who aspire to become<lb/>
journalists.<lb/>
I learned some time ago that Pat<lb/>
O'Neill was not a student and have<lb/>
since been puzzled as to why his per-<lb/>
sonal views have appeared so often in<lb/>
The East Carolinian. I would assume<lb/>
that there are many capable students<lb/>
who would be delighted to write for the<lb/>
newspaper and earn a few dollars at the<lb/>
same time.<lb/>
In college athletic programs, non-<lb/>
students are relegated to spectator<lb/>
status. I propose we employ a similar<lb/>
policy with regard to our newspaper.<lb/>
Lest I be misunderstood, I am not op-<lb/>
posed to an occasional article from an<lb/>
outside source when it is of obvious im-<lb/>
portance.<lb/>
Craig Collie<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Pirate In Pain<lb/>
I am angry. I hurt for the players,<lb/>
coaches and staff of the 1983 ECU<lb/>
Pirate Football team. Without doubt<lb/>
the finest assemblage to ever wear pur-<lb/>
ple and gold, their accomplishments<lb/>
will go unrewarded during the upcom-<lb/>
ing bowl games. At one time, before<lb/>
television began to wield its powerful<lb/>
financial influence, bowl bids were ex-<lb/>
tended based on won-lost records and<lb/>
strength of schedule, among other<lb/>
criteria. When teams with 6-5 records,<lb/>
such as Notre Dune and Mississippi,<lb/>
or those in season ending slumps such<lb/>
as North Carolina and Kentucky, are<lb/>
invited to participate in post-season<lb/>
competition, it makes a sham and<lb/>
mockery of the bowl selection process.<lb/>
ECU may lack the media attention<lb/>
and name recognition of an Alabama<lb/>
or Texas, but they would be a worthy<lb/>
participant in any bowl game this year<lb/>
because of its exciting, aggressive style<lb/>
of play. The media, especially televi-<lb/>
sion, exerts too much power today in<lb/>
events ranging from politics and<lb/>
government to athletics and entertain-<lb/>
ment. When a talented group of winn-<lb/>
ing young athletes is ignored because<lb/>
of television's obsession with high<lb/>
ratings and even higher advertising<lb/>
revenues, it places college football on a<lb/>
par with the professioanl game, remov-<lb/>
ing some of the lustre and excitement<lb/>
from amateur athletics.<lb/>
With hard work and a dedication to<lb/>
excellence, ECU will soon be among<lb/>
college football's elite. The ground-<lb/>
work has been laid, and with many<lb/>
talented athletes returning in 1984, it<lb/>
will be impossible to overlook this<lb/>
deserving program once more. A very<lb/>
proud voice cries out from the East. In<lb/>
the not too distant future, the entire<lb/>
nation will know what so many others<lb/>
already doIt's great to be a<lb/>
Pirate and it's getting even better.<lb/>
Charles D. Shavitz<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Thanx, Prof<lb/>
On Saturday, Oct. 29, a history pro-<lb/>
fessor at ECU came to our rescue when<lb/>
our car stalled in a parking lot on cam-<lb/>
pus. The professor, a native of<lb/>
Canada, saw us in need and gave us ad-<lb/>
vice. Then she took us where we need-<lb/>
ed to go to get the car started. Further-<lb/>
more, she waited until we were on our<lb/>
way to Jackson before departing.<lb/>
Our lives were made richer and fuller<lb/>
by her kindness. The world would be a<lb/>
better place to live if there were more<lb/>
kind deeds like hers. I truly hope this<lb/>
lovely person will have a long and hap-<lb/>
py life when whe retires in England.<lb/>
Thank you very much "Good<lb/>
Samaritan<lb/>
Olivia Cheek<lb/>
Marian Stukes<lb/>
Jackson, N.C.<lb/>
Judge Remembered<lb/>
In last Tuesday's article about the<lb/>
winners of the Rebel contests, one of<lb/>
the judges' names was inadvertently<lb/>
omitted. Julie Fay was also a poetry<lb/>
judge, and we would like her to be<lb/>
recognized for the time she spent help-<lb/>
ing us pick the winners. It means a lot<lb/>
to have cooperation and assistance of<lb/>
faculty members because the more in-<lb/>
put we get seems to make the Rebel<lb/>
more of a campus effort. Thank you.<lb/>
Ellen Moore<lb/>
JbM Editor<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Teach in<lb/>
Receive<lb/>
English<lb/>
Writing<lb/>
B TINA<lb/>
MAROSCHAk<lb/>
The ECt<lb/>
nculum Cor<lb/>
estabhshec rwc<lb/>
lions ?hu'<lb/>
into effect oexi fa<lb/>
appro ed b)<lb/>
Faculty Sc<lb/>
mine anc<lb/>
John H r<lb/>
first add<lb/>
gram  -<lb/>
English d<lb/>
called the<lb/>
Community<lb/>
Efforts To<lb/>
Some<lb/>
munch<lb/>
making ire<lb/>
tons to ?<lb/>
their studerr<lb/>
transfer b ?<lb/>
ing the:r aca<lb/>
program - ? d<lb/>
ding wo:ik in<lb/>
arts,<lb/>
analytical si<lb/>
Institutio<lb/>
ticipating in this<lb/>
Ieg:ate urban rt<lb/>
are using dee<lb/>
grants from the F<lb/>
Foundation. <lb/>
has esta- : I v2 !<lb/>
million program<lb/>
ed at mcreasii -<lb/>
number of stuc<lb/>
who transfer<lb/>
eventually grad<lb/>
Of particular concern<lb/>
because of their<lb/>
enrollments are<lb/>
students from<lb/>
income famil es<lb/>
minority groups<lb/>
The average ae of<lb/>
these student- 2fl<lb/>
BUYING<lb/>
LOANS<lb/>
T s ? C I I '<lb/>
Ste'efli l- 9? t <lb/>
titmeiisi c?<lb/>
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recorder o ?: ? . ? ?<lb/>
anvTtiixg e)v? ? -<lb/>
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SELF SERM<lb/>
41M<lb/>
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hi w?il?iMiin? ? ' '?miiMi'piiimWN?<lb/>
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Open 13<lb/>
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Friday 1-7<lb/>
TWOLO<lb/>
The Geor3<lb/>
Pitt Piazj<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057593_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 29, Igfj<lb/>
?<lb/>
CPS<lb/>
Tail<lb/>
us five years more<lb/>
Jc ret folders in our<lb/>
ell them we'll blow<lb/>
mutes' on what the<lb/>
la thinks of Pierre<lb/>
n this top-secret<lb/>
profiles of heads of<lb/>
ie a real good one. I<lb/>
ig coming up soon,<lb/>
ack something they<lb/>
?tary of slate might<lb/>
?commend it<lb/>
rre's a game plan on<lb/>
iment is going to<lb/>
defense with the<lb/>
 do anything to get<lb/>
n't shove, there's<lb/>
for everybody, but<lb/>
tuse they're going to<lb/>
o find them<lb/>
something. We're<lb/>
us cabinet<lb/>
mmd. No one at the<lb/>
eer going to want<lb/>
'his cabinet again<lb/>
I men vndKait<lb/>
P<lb/>
lods<lb/>
to our rescue when<lb/>
larking lot on cam-<lb/>
r. a native of<lb/>
and gave us ad-<lb/>
us where we need-<lb/>
started. Further-<lb/>
 we were on our<lb/>
5 re departing,<lb/>
je richer and fuller<lb/>
world would be a<lb/>
if there were more<lb/>
I truly hope this<lb/>
ive a long and hap-<lb/>
tires in England,<lb/>
rv much "Good<lb/>
Olivia Cheek<lb/>
Marian Stukes<lb/>
Jackson, N.C.<lb/>
membered<lb/>
fs article about the<lb/>
contests, one of<lb/>
was inadvertently<lb/>
was also a poetry<lb/>
uld like her to be<lb/>
time she spent help-<lb/>
taers. It means a lot<lb/>
fn and assistance of<lb/>
cause the more in-<lb/>
to make the Rebei<lb/>
effort. Thank you.<lb/>
Ellen Moore<lb/>
Rebel Editor<lb/>
Students Who Enter<lb/>
Teaching Field May<lb/>
Receive Scholarships<lb/>
(CPS) ? To help at-<lb/>
tract qualified<lb/>
students to the<lb/>
teaching profession,<lb/>
U.S. Representative<lb/>
Ron Wyden (D-Ore.)<lb/>
is lobbying for an<lb/>
educational scholar-<lb/>
ship fund that would<lb/>
pay students' tuition<lb/>
in return for two years<lb/>
of teaching in public<lb/>
schools after they<lb/>
graduate.<lb/>
"The concern we're<lb/>
addressing in the bill<lb/>
is that the best and<lb/>
brightest are not look-<lb/>
ing at the education<lb/>
and teaching fields<lb/>
said a Wyden aide.<lb/>
While the bill is still<lb/>
in the planning stages,<lb/>
according to Wyden's<lb/>
office, the idea does<lb/>
have the support of<lb/>
the National Educa-<lb/>
tion Association and<lb/>
the American Federa-<lb/>
tion of Teachers.<lb/>
Both groups are<lb/>
conferring with<lb/>
Wyden's office to nail<lb/>
down details for the<lb/>
proposal, which the<lb/>
congressman plans to<lb/>
introduce when the<lb/>
House reconvenes in<lb/>
January.<lb/>
"The final legisla-<lb/>
tion might well be dif-<lb/>
ferent the aide said,<lb/>
"but it will essentially<lb/>
be a federally-funded,<lb/>
state-administered<lb/>
program that would<lb/>
provide scholarships<lb/>
for students who<lb/>
agree to teach for a<lb/>
certain number of<lb/>
years upon gradua-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Wyden's plan calls<lb/>
for as many as 10,000<lb/>
such scholarships a<lb/>
year, and is expected<lb/>
to receive general sup-<lb/>
port from the Reagan<lb/>
administration as well<lb/>
as teachers' associa-<lb/>
tions and education<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
"The idea of the<lb/>
legislation is to ad-<lb/>
dress the quality of<lb/>
the person entering<lb/>
the teaching profes-<lb/>
sion today Wyden's<lb/>
aide said, "and the<lb/>
idea of offering<lb/>
scholarships is a time-<lb/>
proven way to attract<lb/>
qualified people into<lb/>
certain fields<lb/>
Wyden's proposal<lb/>
arose from his work<lb/>
on the House Educa-<lb/>
tion and Labor Com-<lb/>
mittee's National<lb/>
Merit Pay Task<lb/>
Force, whose recom<lb/>
mentations President<lb/>
Reagan has also en<lb/>
corscd.<lb/>
nt<lb/>
J<lb/>
English Department Proposes<lb/>
Writing Curriculum Additions<lb/>
By TINA<lb/>
MAROSCHAK<lb/>
SuflKito<lb/>
The ECU Cur-<lb/>
riculum Committee<lb/>
established two addi-<lb/>
tions which should go<lb/>
into effect next fall, if<lb/>
approved by the<lb/>
Faculty Senate Com-<lb/>
mittee and Chancellor<lb/>
John Howell. The<lb/>
first addition is a pro-<lb/>
gram within the<lb/>
English department<lb/>
called the "certificate<lb/>
in business and<lb/>
technical communica-<lb/>
tion the second is a<lb/>
master's program in<lb/>
"technical and pro-<lb/>
fessional writing<lb/>
Students seeking<lb/>
the communication<lb/>
certificate will be re-<lb/>
quired to complete a<lb/>
five-course program<lb/>
and must maintain at<lb/>
least a B average in<lb/>
each course. William<lb/>
Grossnickle, chair-<lb/>
man of the cirriculum<lb/>
committee and<lb/>
psychology professor,<lb/>
said that student<lb/>
transcripts will not<lb/>
acknowledge the earn-<lb/>
ing of the certificate.<lb/>
William A. Blood-<lb/>
worth, chairman of<lb/>
the English depart-<lb/>
ment, said that new<lb/>
M.A. concentration<lb/>
will require 30<lb/>
semester hours of<lb/>
course work ? 12 in<lb/>
writing, 12 in<lb/>
literature, three in<lb/>
composition theory<lb/>
and three in thesis.<lb/>
Students will be re<lb/>
quired to take i<lb/>
foreign language ex<lb/>
amination and a com<lb/>
prehensive exam ii<lb/>
both technical an<lb/>
professioanl writinj<lb/>
and literature. The:<lb/>
will also have t<lb/>
prepare a thesis an<lb/>
take a final oral exan<lb/>
on it.<lb/>
The Faculty Senat<lb/>
Committee will mee<lb/>
Dec. 6 to discuss fin<lb/>
approval of the net<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
NOW Wants Participation,<lb/>
Support For Women's Issues<lb/>
NOW believes it is im-<lb/>
portant to stay involv-<lb/>
ed. Advice has come<lb/>
from the state chair-<lb/>
man emphasizing the<lb/>
need for NOW to stay<lb/>
involved.<lb/>
By ANDREA<lb/>
MARKELLO<lb/>
John Howell<lb/>
Staff Wrtaw<lb/>
Enthusiatic com-<lb/>
munity members sear-<lb/>
ching for a way to get<lb/>
involved and par-<lb/>
ticipate in women's<lb/>
issues are encouraged<lb/>
to join NOW, the Na-<lb/>
tional Organization<lb/>
for Women.<lb/>
With the inaugura-<lb/>
tion of its new presi-<lb/>
dent, Fran Parrott,<lb/>
the local chapter of<lb/>
the group is<lb/>
reorganizing and sear-<lb/>
ching for new sup-<lb/>
port. Standing<lb/>
members who have<lb/>
worked hard on old<lb/>
issues, such as passage<lb/>
of the ERA.<lb/>
Parrott said the<lb/>
group is looking for<lb/>
all types of potential<lb/>
members. She said<lb/>
few men are involved,<lb/>
so the group would<lb/>
like to increase male<lb/>
participation and<lb/>
develop a better cross-<lb/>
section of members.<lb/>
With the election<lb/>
year approaching,<lb/>
Parrot has sug-<lb/>
gested that those in-<lb/>
terested in becoming<lb/>
members get in touch<lb/>
after Jan. 1 to take a<lb/>
poll and decide what<lb/>
nights are best to<lb/>
meet. In the past,<lb/>
meeting have taken<lb/>
place every other<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Community Colleges Increase<lb/>
Efforts To Prepare Students<lb/>
Campus Dijesi New? Service<lb/>
Some urban com-<lb/>
munity colleges are<lb/>
making ircreased ef-<lb/>
forts to better prepare<lb/>
their students for<lb/>
transfer by overhaul-<lb/>
ing their academic<lb/>
programs, often ad-<lb/>
ding work in liberal<lb/>
arts, sciences and<lb/>
analytical skills.<lb/>
Institutions par-<lb/>
ticipating in this col-<lb/>
legiate urban renewal<lb/>
are using development<lb/>
grants from the Ford<lb/>
Foundation, which<lb/>
has established a $2.5<lb/>
million program aim-<lb/>
ed at increasing the<lb/>
number of students<lb/>
who transfer and<lb/>
eventually graduate.<lb/>
Of particular concern<lb/>
because of their large<lb/>
enrollments are the<lb/>
student from low-<lb/>
income families and<lb/>
minority groups.<lb/>
The average age of<lb/>
these students is 28.<lb/>
BUYING -<lb/>
LOANS<lb/>
TVs. Air Conditioners.<lb/>
Stereos, guns gold silver,<lb/>
diamonds, cameras and<lb/>
equipment, typewriters,<lb/>
kerosene heaters,<lb/>
refrigerators (dorm site on<lb/>
ly), video games A car<lb/>
tndges, power tools,<lb/>
musical instruments,<lb/>
microwave ovens, video<lb/>
recorders, bicycles, and<lb/>
anything else of value<lb/>
Southern Pawn Shop,<lb/>
located 05 Evans Street,<lb/>
downtown 752 J444.<lb/>
They have jobs,<lb/>
families ? more<lb/>
responsibilities than<lb/>
the typical college stu-<lb/>
dent. Higher educa-<lb/>
tion often must take<lb/>
low priority in their<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
Of the nearly five<lb/>
million enrolled for<lb/>
class in U.S. two-year<lb/>
colleges, about 30 per-<lb/>
cent are actually in<lb/>
academic programs,<lb/>
planning to transfer<lb/>
after two years of<lb/>
study. According to<lb/>
the American<lb/>
Association of Com-<lb/>
munity and Junior<lb/>
Colleges, fewer than<lb/>
10 percent actually do<lb/>
transfer.<lb/>
Reasons for the low<lb/>
rate include lifestyle<lb/>
pressures, inadequate<lb/>
preparation and<lb/>
backgrounds which<lb/>
do not emphasize in-<lb/>
tellectual and<lb/>
academic inquiry.<lb/>
At the Community<lb/>
College of<lb/>
Philadelphia, em-<lb/>
phasis is being put on<lb/>
humanities and social<lb/>
sciences based on a<lb/>
humanities honors<lb/>
program. Seventy per-<lb/>
cent of their students<lb/>
are from minority<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
Overall, with the<lb/>
decreasing number of<lb/>
college-age people, in-<lb/>
stitutions of higher<lb/>
education are making<lb/>
greater efforts to en-<lb/>
sure the success and<lb/>
happiness of the<lb/>
students they have<lb/>
enrolled.<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
is taking applications for<lb/>
STUDENT UNION PRESIDENT<lb/>
for the 1984-85 Term<lb/>
Any Full-time student can apply,<lb/>
applications available at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Information Desk.<lb/>
Deadline: December 2,1983<lb/>
Your Christmas Party<lb/>
Headquarters<lb/>
Make our Ambassador party department your first<lb/>
stop for hofiday parties You 11 find everything you<lb/>
need-from the invitations to matching plates, cups<lb/>
and napkins. There are even festive decorations<lb/>
And when the party is over, dean-up is easy, too!<lb/>
C t92 Amoassado' Cards a division ot Hallmar Cards mc<lb/>
i<lb/>
Stsdent Suppty Store<lb/>
Owned and operated by East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
m? PAY IMMEDIATE CASH FOR:<lb/>
CLASS RINGS WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALLGOLD&amp;SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CH'NA&amp;CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
i &amp; RING<lb/>
OF ? StCS CO ? ??C<lb/>
401 S: EVANS ST. openJ?,3.?on.sat.<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
"YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER<lb/>
How To Ease The Burdens<lb/>
Of Campus Life.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
S.I9V00 Abortion from 13<lb/>
to 18 weeks at additional<lb/>
cost. Ptnman. T ad Birth<lb/>
Controi. and Problem<lb/>
Pre?nan Counseling. For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
832-0535 (Toll Free Number<lb/>
800 221-25b8 between<lb/>
9A.M. and 5P.M. weekday<lb/>
RALEIOKVdOMCM'S<lb/>
WEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
f,7Wt?tMorta"S'<lb/>
? ? M j??<lb/>
. lOa, . ?  ?? ????<lb/>
Word Processing Secretarial Services<lb/>
Termpapers - Manuscripts<lb/>
Resume Package:<lb/>
Resume andor individually<lb/>
addressed cover letters and<lb/>
envelopes<lb/>
?$?<lb/>
riifci<lb/>
SELF SERVICE COPIES<lb/>
41M each<lb/>
(wtththtocoapoa) Expire. Dec 15<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
$2.50 and Under<lb/>
Open 13 Hours Daily<lb/>
Monday - Thursday 9-9<lb/>
Friday 1-7 Saturday 9-2<lb/>
TWO LOCATIONS<lb/>
The Georgetown Shops<lb/>
Pitt Ptaza (10-6)<lb/>
CHECK OUT OUR<lb/>
DINNER SPECIALS<lb/>
Try our New Fruit Bar<lb/>
and Improved Salad Bar<lb/>
2 Locations to Better Serve You<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd 7564040<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St. 750-2712<lb/>
<lb/>
 -<lb/>
m?" <lb/>
?4k- ? ? ??? - <lb/>
 ? ??'<lb/>
mm "??m?"ii<lb/>
<pb facs="00057593_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 29, 1983<lb/>
The East Carolinian is beginning a new feature today ?<lb/>
a crossword puzzle, provided by the United Features Syn-<lb/>
dicate. If popular, a similar crossword puzzle will run once<lb/>
a week, on Tuesday. The answers to the puzzle will be<lb/>
printed in the Thursday edition. Student comment on the<lb/>
puzzle is welcome; write to the Campus Forum of The<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
Local Cerebral Palsy Telethon To Return<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Self-esteem<lb/>
6 Falls in drops<lb/>
11 Censures<lb/>
12 Ensnare<lb/>
14 Note of scale<lb/>
15 Nuisances<lb/>
17 Piece tor one<lb/>
18 Goal<lb/>
20 Danger<lb/>
22 Hawaiian<lb/>
dish<lb/>
23 Withered<lb/>
25 Challenges<lb/>
27 Preposition<lb/>
28 Chinese coin<lb/>
30 Flag<lb/>
32 God of love<lb/>
34 Play leading<lb/>
role<lb/>
35 In addition<lb/>
38 Pope's veil<lb/>
41 Spanish<lb/>
article<lb/>
42 Fisherman<lb/>
44 Black<lb/>
45 Swiss river<lb/>
47 Mediter-<lb/>
ranean vessel<lb/>
49 Drunkard<lb/>
50 Break<lb/>
suddenly<lb/>
52 Rude hut<lb/>
54 Symbol for<lb/>
tellurium<lb/>
55 Occupant<lb/>
57 Rubber on<lb/>
pencil<lb/>
59 Powders<lb/>
60 Sufferer from<lb/>
Hansen's<lb/>
disease<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Woodwork-<lb/>
er's tools<lb/>
2 Sun god<lb/>
3 Demon<lb/>
4 Profound<lb/>
5 Ancient<lb/>
chariot<lb/>
6 Cravings<lb/>
7 MD's aide<lb/>
8 Possessive<lb/>
pronoun<lb/>
9 Support<lb/>
10 Tavern<lb/>
11 Consecrated<lb/>
13 Tip<lb/>
16 Ambush<lb/>
19 Evaporates<lb/>
21 Slow mus<lb/>
24 Uncanny<lb/>
26 Springe<lb/>
29 Protuber-<lb/>
ances<lb/>
31 Bedouins<lb/>
33 Chooses<lb/>
35 Animal<lb/>
36 Kite<lb/>
37 Bristle<lb/>
39 Plunderer<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
PUZZLE<lb/>
Jim Everest, Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Director of<lb/>
United Cerebral Palsy<lb/>
of North Carolina,<lb/>
and Jim Fischer, a<lb/>
National Director of<lb/>
United Cerebral Palsy<lb/>
Association, Inc<lb/>
have announced that<lb/>
"Weekend With the<lb/>
Stars Telethon for<lb/>
Cerebral Palsy<lb/>
aired in January of<lb/>
1983, was one of the<lb/>
most successful in the<lb/>
nation, received na-<lb/>
tional recognition and<lb/>
will return on January<lb/>
14-15, 1984.<lb/>
"Monies and<lb/>
pledges in excess of<lb/>
$81,000 were receiv-<lb/>
ed, 93 percent of<lb/>
pledges collected,<lb/>
with 75 percent re-<lb/>
maining in Greenville<lb/>
to support and im-<lb/>
prove our Greenville<lb/>
Cerebral Palsy<lb/>
Center, located at<lb/>
1111 Greenville<lb/>
Boulevard Everest<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The center, under<lb/>
the direction of Bar-<lb/>
bara Thurber, pro-<lb/>
vides services to<lb/>
children and parents<lb/>
in six counties.<lb/>
Since 65 percent of<lb/>
all our funds come<lb/>
from public dona-<lb/>
tions, only a suc-<lb/>
cessful telethon can<lb/>
ensure that the ser-<lb/>
vices continue<lb/>
Everest said. "The<lb/>
telethon enabled us to<lb/>
add to staff members,<lb/>
increase speech<lb/>
therapy and purchase<lb/>
equipment for the<lb/>
center. Community<lb/>
support, hundreds of<lb/>
volunteers, center<lb/>
staff and parent sup-<lb/>
port, and a good<lb/>
coordinator made all<lb/>
this possible<lb/>
Mrs. Paul (Nita)<lb/>
Rasbcrry of Green-<lb/>
ville will coordinate<lb/>
the telethon again this<lb/>
year, according to<lb/>
Everest. "She's<lb/>
positive, has expertise<lb/>
in television, great<lb/>
leadership, (and)<lb/>
believes in this<lb/>
cause he said.<lb/>
The telethon will be<lb/>
aired from the Green-<lb/>
ville Moose Lodge<lb/>
Auditorium over<lb/>
WITN-TV. Paul<lb/>
Oughton is producer,<lb/>
and members of the<lb/>
Eyewitness News<lb/>
team will help pro-<lb/>
mote events and par-<lb/>
ticipation for the<lb/>
telethon throughout<lb/>
the viewing area.<lb/>
WITN-TV staff<lb/>
members are donating<lb/>
their time. Network<lb/>
stars will again visit<lb/>
Greenville to host.<lb/>
and names will be an-<lb/>
nounced at a later<lb/>
date. Twelve phone<lb/>
centers will be set up<lb/>
in various areas to<lb/>
take pledges during<lb/>
the telethon.<lb/>
Many businesses<lb/>
and clubs have com-<lb/>
mitted to fundraising<lb/>
events and other par-<lb/>
ticipation. Mr<lb/>
Everest urges those in-<lb/>
terested in supporting<lb/>
the telethon or par-<lb/>
ticipating to contact<lb/>
the telethon office at<lb/>
756-5390.<lb/>
Auditions<lb/>
Local auditions for the national tcletnon,<lb/>
"Weekend With the Stars for Cerebral<lb/>
Palsy have been set for Dec. 6 and 7. To<lb/>
schedule an audition, cal) the talent chair<lb/>
man at 756-5390 between tr.e hours 4 p.m.<lb/>
and 6 p.m or write to Nita Rasbcrry, Coor<lb/>
dinator, P.O. Box 3271, Greenville, North<lb/>
Carolina 27834, and the talent chairman will<lb/>
j return your call.<lb/>
-5-5?!??<lb/>
40 Go in<lb/>
43 Revolu-<lb/>
tionary<lb/>
46 Genus of<lb/>
frogs<lb/>
48 Country of<lb/>
Europe<lb/>
51 Crony:<lb/>
colloq<lb/>
53 Short sleep<lb/>
56 Tar heel<lb/>
state: abbr.<lb/>
58 Compass<lb/>
point<lb/>
PET VILLAGE<lb/>
?<lb/>
1983 Unrted Feature Syndicate. ?nc<lb/>
WITH THIS COUPON ? ?<lb/>
GIVE US<lb/>
W?<lb/>
FILM<lb/>
WE'LL<lb/>
GIVE YOU<lb/>
A DEAL!<lb/>
Salt Water Set-ups<lb/>
on Sale<lb/>
45 gal. Hexagon wstand $241.80<lb/>
27 gal Hex. wstand $192.95<lb/>
55 gal w out stand $229.90<lb/>
30 gal w out stand $148.47<lb/>
 Light, Filter, and necessary equipment<lb/>
MENDENHAt<lb/>
SNACK BAR<lb/>
???????<lb/>
salad bar<lb/>
hot sandwiches<lb/>
daily specials<lb/>
conveniently located<lb/>
continuous service<lb/>
7 30 am- T- 30 pm<lb/>
?????????<lb/>
east caroima<lb/>
24Hour Service on Kodacolor<lb/>
FILM SENT TO COLORCRAFT<lb/>
$1.00 OFF Developing Any 24 or 36<lb/>
1 Exposure roll Kodacolor Film<lb/>
50c OFF Developing Any roll slide film<lb/>
50c OFF Any Color 5x7 Enlargemen'<lb/>
$1.00 OFF Any 8x10, 8x12,11x14 Color Enlargement<lb/>
oftcoecro hop<lb/>
" ??? Mm fflTiHOC STREET<lb/>
Kodak<lb/>
BIS SOUTH COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
OnEENV?.LE. NX. 27834<lb/>
Limit otieloupon per oroer-coupon expires 6-T-84<lb/>
Copyright 198<lb/>
Kroger sav on<lb/>
Ouanmy Rights Reserved,<lb/>
None Sold To Dealers<lb/>
iTEM<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru Sat<lb/>
Dec 3, 1985<lb/>
Open Mon. thru Sat. Sam to Midnight - Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Eacri o' tese ad?er<lb/>
dsed items s 'e<lb/>
qui'ed to be 'ead.iy<lb/>
avaaDie tor sale m<lb/>
eac K'oger Sav on<lb/>
e?cept as speoticaiiv<lb/>
noted 'n this ad 11 e<lb/>
do 'un out ot n ilem<lb/>
e ei .ou fOu'<lb/>
choice o' a co"1<lb/>
; a'ab'e iterr hen<lb/>
available reflecting<lb/>
The same savings or a<lb/>
'd'nehec hh a<lb/>
entitle yOu to Dur<lb/>
chase the advertised<lb/>
item at the advertised<lb/>
price with.n 30 days<lb/>
Asfc??<lb/>
oupon per ord<lb/>
rrWffJ,JJ,J,r3J311J3JJJJ???MJJJJJB<lb/>
phone<lb/>
752-3172<lb/>
Located 1 mile past<lb/>
Hastings Ford on<lb/>
10th St. Ext.<lb/>
CUffs<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
-Specials<lb/>
Monday thru Thursday<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
POLAR PAK<lb/>
ice<lb/>
Cream<lb/>
loKi:<lb/>
DIET COKE, TAB OR<lb/>
coca<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
2-itr.<lb/>
V2-cai.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
TROPICANA OR KROGER<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Multigrain Bread<lb/>
24-02.<lb/>
Loaf<lb/>
V, Tropical<lb/>
<lb/>
REGULAR OR LIGHT<lb/>
Michelob<lb/>
Vi-Gai.<lb/>
an.<lb/>
LIMIT 2 PLEASE<lb/>
VIVA<lb/>
Paper<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
N.R.<lb/>
BtlS.<lb/>
vV<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp<lb/>
$2.95<lb/>
Ocean Perch $1.99<lb/>
jumbo<lb/>
Roll<lb/>
KROGER V7<lb/>
Lowfat<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
$?159<lb/>
Gal. <lb/>
U.S.D.A. GOV'T INSPECTED<lb/>
GENUINE<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
3-LDS.<lb/>
Or More<lb/>
4S&amp;<lb/>
' ?M<lb/>
Seafood Cakes $1.99<lb/>
tot<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tossed Salad may be substituted for slaw 3s- extra<lb/>
TAKEN BAKE<lb/>
Deli Fresh<lb/>
2JB<lb/>
FRESH BAKED<lb/>
ICED<lb/>
Cinnamon<lb/>
RONS<lb/>
THE EAST( AiOII?<lb/>
<lb/>
Laura Leigh Qubenberry an<lb/>
Playho<lb/>
Poodle pins and tassle<lb/>
go-go boots and miniskirts<lb/>
Beatles and the Beach Boy, j<lb/>
Dylan and James Dean<lb/>
parallel the emotional evoij<lb/>
of four teenagers in David<lb/>
mer's rueful comed hit Albt<lb/>
be presented by the East Q<lb/>
Playhouse. December 1-3,<lb/>
All performances will bet<lb/>
8:15 p.m. in McGinnis Theat<lb/>
the ECU campus in Greenvij<lb/>
Diveded into eight scenes<lb/>
span their years at Marti<lb/>
Buren High School, the<lb/>
 Cheers<lb/>
Wil<lb/>
B CRI Y<lb/>
r<lb/>
Can "Cheers NBC<lb/>
survive the most potential<lb/>
to television prime time? Or<lb/>
the dial looking for an antij<lb/>
For romance ? Prime '<lb/>
has elbowed its way behm<lb/>
"Cheers an ensemble s<lb/>
mode by "Taxi" creators<lb/>
and James Burrows<lb/>
"Cheers one of NB<lb/>
series, relied in us first s<lb/>
egoes, impossible differen<lb/>
sexual tension between the<lb/>
small-time baseball pitcher<lb/>
at Cheers and his stuck-up.<lb/>
ly identified by bar regular<lb/>
smart). Viewers like<lb/>
dialogue, well-tuned actm<lb/>
bar philosophers.<lb/>
But they were intrigued<lb/>
duels between highbrow Di<lb/>
each appeared to live by<lb/>
fall for you if you were the<lb/>
the actors played up a phj<lb/>
intellectual revulsion betw<lb/>
the end of the program's<lb/>
was on.<lb/>
Historically, that's bad<lb/>
a show's momentum ? an?<lb/>
tagonism between the sexej<lb/>
of male female leads, thef<lb/>
kill off the series is to haj<lb/>
love. Television's been usj<lb/>
tuckered-out comedies tori<lb/>
Remember "Get Sman<lb/>
developed and written I I<lb/>
Henrv teamed inept but<lb/>
well Smart, with sexy<lb/>
(Agent 99) as governmenj<lb/>
to foil (what else?) the bi<lb/>
and 99 maintained a resj<lb/>
ed ridiculous cases during <lb/>
but in its final seasons<lb/>
switch and to a blossomil<lb/>
even a baby boy. Not onlj<lb/>
career dead in its track n<lb/>
And who can forget ?<lb/>
? "Mork and Mindy?'<lb/>
show revolved around Re<lb/>
goofiness and the trials of<lb/>
took him in. But ABC, u<lb/>
cess, tinkered with the fc<lb/>
the third year network exl<lb/>
revive it was to marry thej<lb/>
a child: Jonathan Winterl<lb/>
for good.<lb/>
The list could go on an<lb/>
Milk" fell victim to Prii<lb/>
1970 after two hit year<lb/>
jokes. Only Scruffy, hoi<lb/>
Looking for sometl<lb/>
py hour this Friday? J<lb/>
the knot after four y<lb/>
tempts to break a haw<lb/>
some astronaut on<lb/>
Dream of Jeannie")<lb/>
. ?-<lb/>
r <lb/>
1<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057593_0007"/><lb/>
eturn<lb/>
eJ to fundraising<lb/>
and other par-<lb/>
 p a t i o n. Mr.<lb/>
r ;ges thosein-<lb/>
Ited in supporting<lb/>
elethon or par-<lb/>
jating to contact<lb/>
telethon office at<lb/>
wo<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
NOVEMBER 29. 193<lb/>
Ptgel<lb/>
IS<lb/>
itional teletnon,<lb/>
t tor Cerebral<lb/>
c 6 and 7. To<lb/>
e talent chair-<lb/>
irs 4 p.m.<lb/>
a-err, Coor-<lb/>
renville, North<lb/>
: chairman will<lb/>
Lted<lb/>
?'1<lb/>
Daytime Soap Operas<lb/>
Wallow In Nastiness<lb/>
Love in the afternoon was all<lb/>
right with Mick LaSalle long<lb/>
before they started with those<lb/>
commercials. So when I decided<lb/>
to check out the soap operas, it<lb/>
seemed only natural to choose the<lb/>
ABC biggies: Att My Children,<lb/>
One Life to Live, and General<lb/>
Hospital. I figured I'd give them a<lb/>
month and see what I thought.<lb/>
Mick<lb/>
LaSalle<lb/>
ay<lb/>
toyCAHLTOM IINI<lb/>
Laura Leigh Qnisenberry and Erie TIBey rehearse for upcoming comedy Album.<lb/>
Playhouse Presents 'Album<lb/>
Poodle pins and tassle socks,<lb/>
go-go boots and miniskirts, the<lb/>
Beatles and the Beach Boys, Bob<lb/>
Dylan and James Dean ? all<lb/>
parallel the emotional evolution<lb/>
of four teenagers in David Rim-<lb/>
mer's rueful comedy hit Album to<lb/>
be presented by the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse, December 1-3, 5?6.<lb/>
All performances will begin at<lb/>
8:15 p.m. in McGinnis Theatre on<lb/>
the ECU campus in Greenville.<lb/>
Diveded into eight scenes which<lb/>
span their years at Martin Van<lb/>
Buren High School, the play<lb/>
'Cheers'<lb/>
chronicles the coming of age of<lb/>
two teenaged couples during the<lb/>
turbulent 60s. The language is<lb/>
frank, but often funny, as the<lb/>
four struggle with impending<lb/>
adulthood and their awakening<lb/>
sexuality. The action ranges from<lb/>
summer camp, to dormitory<lb/>
bedrooms, to senior proms with<lb/>
the popular music of the period ?<lb/>
the Rolling Stones, Del Shannon<lb/>
and Johnny Rivers ? ever present<lb/>
as a telling counter point to an<lb/>
emotional anchor for the lives of<lb/>
the young foursome. As the years<lb/>
spin by it becomes apparent that<lb/>
maturity will bring differing perils<lb/>
and problems for each person,<lb/>
although they will all continue to<lb/>
recall the special excitement of<lb/>
those last few carefree years<lb/>
together.<lb/>
Tickets for Album are now on<lb/>
sale and may be purchased at the<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre Box Office,<lb/>
corner of Fifth and Eastern<lb/>
Streets in Greenville, Monday<lb/>
through Friday, from 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
until 4:00 p.m or may be reserv-<lb/>
ed by calling 757-6390.<lb/>
Will NBC Hit<lb/>
Bv CARLYN EBERT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Can "Cheers NBC's hit successor to "Taxi<lb/>
survive the most potentially lethal plot twist known<lb/>
to television prime time? Or will fans get twitchy with<lb/>
the dial looking for an antidote?<lb/>
For romance ? Prime Time Love Syndrome ?<lb/>
has elbowed its way behind the Boston bar housing<lb/>
"Cheers an ensemble sitcom cast in the "Taxi"<lb/>
mode by "Taxi" creators Glen Charles, Les Charles<lb/>
and James Burrows.<lb/>
"Cheers one of NBC's few successful recent<lb/>
series, relied in its First season on the conflicting<lb/>
egoes, impossible differences and ? yes indeed ?<lb/>
sexual tension between the main characters, a retired<lb/>
small-time baseball pitcher who owns and tends bar<lb/>
at Cheers and his stuck-up, academic waitress (usual-<lb/>
ly identified by bar regulars as, "That's Diane. She's<lb/>
smart). Viewers like "Cheers" for its fast<lb/>
dialogue, well-tuned acting and diversified cast of<lb/>
bar philosophers.<lb/>
But they were intrigued as well by the smart word<lb/>
duels between highbrow Diane and wolfish Sam, who<lb/>
each appeared to live by the old credo, "I wouldn't<lb/>
fall for you if you were the last person on earth But<lb/>
the actors played up a physical attraction despite an<lb/>
intellectual revulsion between Diane and Sam, and by<lb/>
the end of the program's first season the romance<lb/>
was on.<lb/>
Historically, that's bad news. When a good part of<lb/>
a show's momentum ? and laughs ? depends on an-<lb/>
tagonism between the sexes or on a contrasting pair<lb/>
of malefemale leads, the surest way its writers can<lb/>
kill off the series is to have the unlikely duo fall in<lb/>
love. Television's been using this ploy to finish off<lb/>
tuckered-out comedies for years.<lb/>
Remember "Get Smart?" The late '60's spy spoof<lb/>
developed and written by Mel Brooks and Buck<lb/>
Henry teamed inept but enthusiastic Agent 86, Max-<lb/>
well Smart, with sexy, competent Susan Hilton<lb/>
(Agent 99) as government intelligence agents trying<lb/>
to foil (what else?) the bad guys at K.A.O.S. Smart<lb/>
and 99 maintained a respectable distance as they solv-<lb/>
ed ridiculous cases during the show's first four years,<lb/>
but in its final seasons succumbed to a network<lb/>
switch and to a blossoming romance, marriage and<lb/>
even a baby boy. Not only did Baby Smart stop 99 s<lb/>
career dead in its track but the series as well.<lb/>
And who can forget - though so many have tried<lb/>
- "Mork and Mindy?" During its first season the<lb/>
show revolved around Robin Williams's frantic aben<lb/>
goofiness and the trials of the nice Earthling girl who<lb/>
took him in. But ABC, unsatisfied with MlrivtMC-<lb/>
cess, tinkered with the formula each season untd in<lb/>
the third year network execs decided the only way o<lb/>
revive it was to marry the two off and bless thenvwrth<lb/>
a child: Jonathan Winters, no less. Viewers tuned out<lb/>
for ffood<lb/>
The list could go on and on. "The Ghost andiMn.<lb/>
Muir" fell victim to Prime Time Love Syndrome in<lb/>
1970 after two hit years of nasty, practical ghost<lb/>
jokes. Only Scruffy, however, objected.<lb/>
Looking for something strange to dnmVtoj hap-<lb/>
py hour this Friday? Jeannie and Major <lb/>
the knot after four years of the jealous gemesat-<lb/>
tempts to break a hands-off pohey wrth hand-<lb/>
some astronaut on Dec. 2, lJt jf8l<lb/>
Dream of Jeannie") ended six months later.<lb/>
Affairs with ghosts, genies and aliens aren't the<lb/>
only ones susceptible to PTLS's death dart: After<lb/>
four years of incredibly bland courtship, Andy and<lb/>
schoolteacher Helen Crump got married and moved<lb/>
away from Mayberry to give CBS plausible reason<lb/>
for ending "The Andy Griffith Show" in 1968. And<lb/>
when that venerable rock of '70s spinoffs, "Happy<lb/>
Days sent its teenaged Joanie and Chachi off to<lb/>
make it on their own in Chicago, most viewers over<lb/>
the age of 13 didn't even tune in to wave good rid-<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
But the "Cheers" format, you'll notice, is a lot<lb/>
different from that of these family or slapstick-based<lb/>
sitcoms. It follows a different TV formula for prime<lb/>
time success: it's based on the relationships people<lb/>
form at work, not at home or in the "Twilight<lb/>
ZoneAnd so any possible romantic entanglements<lb/>
on the job aren't primarily last-ditch efforts to pah-<lb/>
characters up in a happy ending like the fifth act of<lb/>
an Elizabethean comedy.<lb/>
But the question still stands: can "Cheers" over-<lb/>
come workplace romance? Previous on-the-job com-<lb/>
edies rarely chanced co-worker hanky-panky,<lb/>
although fans with good memories will remember a<lb/>
sadly touching episode of "The Mary Tyler Moore<lb/>
Show" in which Lou Grant made a pass at Mary, as<lb/>
well as a hilarious "Taxi" that ended with Elaine and<lb/>
Alex, after a date staged to impress Elaine's friend,<lb/>
kissing goodnight for real. And that caution,<lb/>
perhaps, can be traced to the predictable outcomes of<lb/>
so many office romances ? the affair ends abruptly<lb/>
and the lovers act like a pair of wary cats turning<lb/>
work into a cold war battleground. In other words,<lb/>
it's impossible ? and uncomfortable ? to work with<lb/>
someone you've just broken up with. And even<lb/>
harder to do it on television.<lb/>
Aha. That must be what I've been thinking all<lb/>
along. Diane and Sam don't stand a chance, do they?<lb/>
Or will "Cheers" let their romance play on<lb/>
realistically?<lb/>
Since they've started messing around, their weekly<lb/>
prime-time bickering has become, if anything, fun-<lb/>
nier, more frequent, and more personal. "I get along<lb/>
better with my wife, and we've exchanged gunfire<lb/>
observes one cynic intent on breaking Sam and Diane<lb/>
apart. This romance in close quarters is quite<lb/>
believable. The show hasn't sacrificed the contrast<lb/>
between the two for the sake of love and honor, and<lb/>
points it up with constant references not to their emo-<lb/>
tional life, but to their sex life.<lb/>
Last week, when Sam told Diane that part of his<lb/>
life was still "hands off to her questioning, she<lb/>
responded icily, "And from now on, part of me will<lb/>
be hands off to you<lb/>
"Just my luck it'd be one of the parts I care<lb/>
about Sam shot back, his comebacks getting better<lb/>
and better with practice. But he delivered his snappy<lb/>
line to an empty bar, because she'd already sailed off<lb/>
the set in miffed dignity.<lb/>
The rest of the "Cheers" cast treat the relationship<lb/>
as passing fancy, sheer bedroom antics or repulsive<lb/>
slime. "If you two are gonna do stuff like<lb/>
that, "groans Karla, the other waitress, "at least have<lb/>
the decency to do it out by the garbage<lb/>
Much of the show's future depends on whether or<lb/>
not the writers can sustain the tension between Sam<lb/>
and Diane without letting hokiness overtake the<lb/>
romance and romance taking over the show ? and<lb/>
on whether viewers continue to enjoy the battle.<lb/>
I liked One Life and General<lb/>
Hospital. But I couldn't go the<lb/>
distance with All My Children ?<lb/>
despite Jenny, who's the sweetest<lb/>
thing on TV, and despite a plot<lb/>
that started to suck me in about a<lb/>
Grace Kelly-type (Nina) going<lb/>
back with her jerk husband<lb/>
(Cliff). I'm too nice a guy to have<lb/>
to sit through Opel and Ericka. As<lb/>
long as those two are on the show,<lb/>
All My Children will never appeal<lb/>
to me.<lb/>
Every year the woman who<lb/>
plays Opel Gardner gets one of<lb/>
those Day-time Drama Emmy's<lb/>
? which only tells me that all the<lb/>
judges are from the Bronx. Opel is<lb/>
a nasty parody of a Southern<lb/>
woman. And nice people in New<lb/>
York and Boston watch her and<lb/>
truly believe that Southern women<lb/>
are like that. Then your mother<lb/>
goes up North, gets treated like a<lb/>
moron and you wonder why.<lb/>
As for Ericka, let's be honest:<lb/>
she has a face that could haunt a<lb/>
house. Yeah, I know it's not her<lb/>
fault. But come on ? as long as<lb/>
I'm not forced to look at her, I<lb/>
won't.<lb/>
In soap operas, adults live like<lb/>
college students ? and they're<lb/>
good at it. Nobody works. And<lb/>
everybody's after everybody else.<lb/>
The only concerns are sex, love,<lb/>
who's going with whom, who's<lb/>
pregnant by whom, who's<lb/>
cheating on whomever, and "Are<lb/>
we gonna tell Bo it's his kid ? or<lb/>
what?<lb/>
The shows are fantasies. Yet<lb/>
they provide role models. And<lb/>
this is where things can get con-<lb/>
fused: A guy who does great with<lb/>
the broads of General Hospital<lb/>
might bomb out in real life using<lb/>
the same approach.<lb/>
That's why it's time Mick<lb/>
LaSalle checked out the techni-<lb/>
ques of the male soap opera<lb/>
characters.<lb/>
Marco Dane. Marco was arguing<lb/>
with his girlfriend Edwina. He<lb/>
had rented a hall, invited guests<lb/>
and hired a band for his and Ed-<lb/>
wina's wedding before he had<lb/>
even proposed to her.<lb/>
Edwina went into a long thing<lb/>
on how this action by Marco in-<lb/>
dicated that he really didn't take<lb/>
her seriously as a person. After<lb/>
unsuccessfully trying to defend<lb/>
himself, Marco looked at her and<lb/>
said, "Can I just ask you one<lb/>
question?"<lb/>
Edwina: "What?"<lb/>
Marco: "Is this something about<lb/>
Women's Lib?"<lb/>
Edwina: "No, Marco(And she<lb/>
went into the same song and<lb/>
dance.)<lb/>
Marco: "All right. Look. This is<lb/>
about Women's Lib. I'll tell you<lb/>
what: Tomorrow, if you're in the<lb/>
neighborhood, stop by at seven<lb/>
o'clock and we'll get married<lb/>
At seven o'clock the next day,<lb/>
Edwina was there. In real life it<lb/>
would've happened the same way.<lb/>
Marco Dane is a street smart,<lb/>
impulsive, New York-style<lb/>
wiseguy in his early 30s who's<lb/>
been everything from a movie<lb/>
director to a hood. He looks like<lb/>
an Italian version of Giligan, but<lb/>
he's the coolest guy on One Life<lb/>
to Live.<lb/>
Asa Bucchanan: In real life,<lb/>
billionaire oil tycoon Asa Buc-<lb/>
chanan would do a lot better with<lb/>
the ladies. Not only is he supposed<lb/>
to be one of the richest men in the<lb/>
world, but he's a strong looking<lb/>
older guy with a little-boy en-<lb/>
thusiasm women would like<lb/>
anyway.<lb/>
Bo Bucchanan: Bo Bucchanan, at<lb/>
times, seems right on the edge of<lb/>
being a little bit too nice. But he<lb/>
backs hjmself up by insisting on<lb/>
honesty from ms women. When<lb/>
he discovered that his wife,<lb/>
Delilah, had been lying to him<lb/>
about just about everything. Bo<lb/>
walked ? and kept walking. If<lb/>
he's kind, it's not out of<lb/>
weakness; it's by choice. The guy<lb/>
has standards and I like that.<lb/>
Other men on One Life to Live<lb/>
are Gary Corelli, who's making a<lb/>
moron of himself with Cassie;<lb/>
Clint Bucchanan, the kind of guy<lb/>
who doesn't understand women,<lb/>
so he wisely keeps his mouth shut<lb/>
and comes off strong and silent;<lb/>
and Herb Callison, the nicest guy<lb/>
in the world, who's tough enough<lb/>
to keep his beautiful, high-strung<lb/>
wife (the infamous Dorian) in<lb/>
line.<lb/>
General Hospital<lb/>
There are two kinds of women<lb/>
who watch General Hospital: the<lb/>
ones who've made the decision for<lb/>
Luke, and the ones who've made<lb/>
the decision for Scorpio. Sure,<lb/>
many like both guys. But just like<lb/>
in the '60s when you had to<lb/>
choose between "John" and<lb/>
"Paul every woman I've talked<lb/>
to knows ? has decided ? which<lb/>
guy she likes better.<lb/>
Luke Spencer. He's got a bad<lb/>
nose, a lousey complexion, and<lb/>
hair like Bozo. He also has chap-<lb/>
ped Ups 365 days a year. Admit it:<lb/>
The guy's homely.<lb/>
So what?<lb/>
Bogart was thin, fairly short,<lb/>
had a humongous vein coming<lb/>
down the side of his head, spoke<lb/>
with a lisp and had a twitch but<lb/>
he was everything a man should<lb/>
be ? and women knew it.<lb/>
If you watch General Hospital<lb/>
for a week straight, it becomes<lb/>
clear why many women find Luke<lb/>
so attractive. Luke Spencer is<lb/>
brave, straight-forward and car-<lb/>
Se? ABC's, p. S<lb/>
Spring Semester Films<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
Date Time<lb/>
One Life to Live<lb/>
Larry Wolek: Larry Wolek is a<lb/>
divorced surgeon in his early 40s<lb/>
who should do a lot better than he<lb/>
does. He's not short on looks,<lb/>
guts, or brains. But Larry is too<lb/>
nice a guy. You know ? the kind<lb/>
of guy a woman calls sooh nice,<lb/>
and gets rid of the next week.<lb/>
A couple of weeks ago Larry<lb/>
was sitting at a bar with a<lb/>
beautiful nurse. He wanted to kiss<lb/>
her, and she wanted to be kissed.<lb/>
So what did Larry do? He asked,<lb/>
with a cute smile, "Would you be<lb/>
scandalized if I kissed you, right<lb/>
here in this bar?" He killed the<lb/>
woman's excitement. She was sit-<lb/>
ting there wondering what was go-<lb/>
ing to happen. And he wrecked it<lb/>
by asking permission.<lb/>
So he kissed her. Big deal. He<lb/>
didn't even slip her the tongue.<lb/>
As basic material, Larry isn't<lb/>
bad. But he has to loosen up and<lb/>
take some chances, or else it's all<lb/>
going to go to waste.<lb/>
Anthony McKonna: Anthony<lb/>
McKonna is a mid-40s sleaze of a<lb/>
businessman whose problem is the<lb/>
opposite of Larry's. He's too<lb/>
forceful. He's so insecure that<lb/>
every time a woman does<lb/>
something he doesn't like, he con-<lb/>
siders it a challenge and hits the<lb/>
ceiling.<lb/>
McKonna and Delilah ? his<lb/>
latest interest ? were in a<lb/>
restaurant. Delilah's estranged<lb/>
husband walked in, so Delilah<lb/>
wanted to leave. McKonna almost<lb/>
broke her arm trying to keep her<lb/>
in her seat.<lb/>
McKonna has a chip on his<lb/>
shoulder. He doesn't like women.<lb/>
Smart women can spot a guy like<lb/>
this a mile away.<lb/>
Twilight Zone, The MovieJan. 5-77:00, 9:00<lb/>
Star WarsJan. 97:00, 9:30<lb/>
The Wrong BoxJan.118:00<lb/>
FlashdanceJan. 12-147:00, 9:00<lb/>
The Bicycle Thief LaStradaJan. 187:00 9:00<lb/>
Raiders of the Lost ArkJan. 19-217:00, 9:30<lb/>
Trading PlacesJan. 26-287:00, 9:00<lb/>
Evil DeadJan. 27-2811:00<lb/>
Say Amen, SomebodyJan. 308:00<lb/>
The ShiningFeb. 3-47:00, 9:30<lb/>
King of HeartsFeb. 88:00<lb/>
Blue ThunderFeb. 9-107:00, 9:30<lb/>
Risky BusinessFeb. 16-187:00, 9:00<lb/>
Joseph Andrews Tom JonesFeb. 227:00 9:00<lb/>
Close Encounters of the Third KindFeb. 24-257:00, 9:30<lb/>
The Producers Blazing Saddles High AnxietyFeb. 265:00 7:00 9:00<lb/>
KagemushaMarch 148:00<lb/>
Monty Python and the Hoty GraUMarch 15-177:00. 9:00<lb/>
War GamesMarch 22-247:00, 9:30<lb/>
A Boy and His DogMarch 23-2412:00<lb/>
PsychoMarch 288:00<lb/>
PsychoUMarch 29-317:00. 9:30<lb/>
Silent Running BladerunnerApriM7:00 00<lb/>
Richard Pryor: Hare and NowApril 5-77:00, 9K?<lb/>
The Last WaveApril 118:00<lb/>
JawsApril 12-147:00.9:30<lb/>
GhnmaShokorApril 13-1412:00<lb/>
Return of the Saemucus 7April 258:00<lb/>
iwtc.April 26-287:00, ?00<lb/>
<lb/>
3i<lb/>
htpCvr "<lb/>
?.ii?i ihhm?i ? ??<lb/>
MiNMMMiiM?MMn??MnawM<lb/>
? ? ??<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057593_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EASTAROL1NIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 22 1983<lb/>
?<lb/>
ABC's Soap Operas Naughty<lb/>
Coot, from p. 7<lb/>
ing. He's not afraid to<lb/>
be himself. And,<lb/>
maybe most impor-<lb/>
tantly, he's a fun guy.<lb/>
Robert Scorpio: Scor-<lb/>
pio is witty, well-<lb/>
I raveled and sharp.<lb/>
He's the kind of guy<lb/>
who goes over big<lb/>
with women who go<lb/>
for the charming type.<lb/>
Despite the fact<lb/>
that his face seems<lb/>
locked in a permanent<lb/>
smirk, Scorpio makes<lb/>
big points in the looks<lb/>
department. He looks<lb/>
like an Australian<lb/>
John Kennedy.<lb/>
If he has any faults,<lb/>
it's that he never<lb/>
makes love to his<lb/>
wife, Holly, on the<lb/>
living room couch.<lb/>
Sex seems a little too<lb/>
routine ? and too<lb/>
ritual ? for the Scor-<lb/>
pios. I mean, how<lb/>
many times is he go-<lb/>
ing to carry Holly into<lb/>
the bedroom with that<lb/>
same solemn look on<lb/>
his face?<lb/>
A little more of the<lb/>
Luke Spencer ("I'll<lb/>
race you upstairs)<lb/>
approach would give<lb/>
Robert some of the<lb/>
spark he's lacking.<lb/>
Alan Quartermaine<lb/>
and Rick Weber. Both<lb/>
are good guys. But<lb/>
both need to be more<lb/>
forceful with their<lb/>
wives. Monica is a<lb/>
shrew. Leslie has a<lb/>
gambling problem.<lb/>
Both women don't<lb/>
like themselves and<lb/>
want to stop it. Both<lb/>
husbands can help<lb/>
them by getting<lb/>
tough.<lb/>
Grant Putnam: The<lb/>
real Grant is dead,<lb/>
and this Grant is a<lb/>
former commie spy<lb/>
turned nice person<lb/>
who wants to go on<lb/>
living the Grant life.<lb/>
Don't try to make<lb/>
sense out of all this.<lb/>
Just check out<lb/>
Grant's wife.<lb/>
On Thanksgiving,<lb/>
Grant saved the leg of<lb/>
this foreigner who<lb/>
had given him a lot of<lb/>
trouble. The foreigner<lb/>
asked Grant, "Why<lb/>
did you help me?"<lb/>
Celia, Grant's wife,<lb/>
jumped in. "Because<lb/>
he's a doctor and a<lb/>
good one, and you<lb/>
should be damned<lb/>
glad he is<lb/>
A woman who<lb/>
stands by her man<lb/>
knows what being a<lb/>
woman is all about.<lb/>
Celia Quartermaine is<lb/>
the best part of<lb/>
General Hospital.<lb/>
Other guys on the<lb/>
show are Brock, who<lb/>
shows how a man can<lb/>
be aggressive and still<lb/>
be a good guy;<lb/>
Blackie, an out-and-<lb/>
out joke, who does<lb/>
for New York boys<lb/>
what Opel does for<lb/>
Southern Women;<lb/>
and Jimmy Lee, who<lb/>
they tell me started<lb/>
out like a lunatic and<lb/>
has since redeemed<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
People who put<lb/>
down soap operas are<lb/>
usually found in one<lb/>
of the following<lb/>
categories: There are<lb/>
the guys who resent<lb/>
anything that women<lb/>
like. There are the in-<lb/>
tellectuals who<lb/>
assume, like<lb/>
everything else, soap<lb/>
operas must be gar-<lb/>
bage. There are the<lb/>
fake intellectuals who<lb/>
make a habit of put-<lb/>
ting down stuff they<lb/>
know nothing about.<lb/>
There are the people<lb/>
who don't want to<lb/>
believe they're miss-<lb/>
ing out on a good<lb/>
thing ? so they<lb/>
decide the thing isn't<lb/>
good. And there are<lb/>
the people who secret-<lb/>
ly do like soap operas,<lb/>
but are afraid to ad-<lb/>
mit it to the people in<lb/>
the other categories.<lb/>
But there is nothing<lb/>
wrong with either of<lb/>
these shows. One Life<lb/>
To Live and General<lb/>
Hospital are a lot bet-<lb/>
ter than most of what<lb/>
you find on prime-<lb/>
time. Characters have<lb/>
a chance to develop<lb/>
on soap operas. And<lb/>
since the writers have<lb/>
a lot of air-time to<lb/>
play with, dialogue<lb/>
sounds more real on<lb/>
these shows than<lb/>
anywhere else on TV.<lb/>
Eat<lb/>
Walnettoes.<lb/>
Walnettoes<lb/>
Are<lb/>
Good.<lb/>
Bdusch&amp;Lomb<lb/>
Soft Lenses<lb/>
GQMPIOE<lb/>
99<lb/>
00<lb/>
OPIOMCTNC<lb/>
OCCAftECQfTCR<lb/>
Includes initial eye examination, lenses, care kit,<lb/>
instructions and follow-up visits for the month<lb/>
ECU students I.D. required.<lb/>
22S GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
TIPTON ANNEX<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
Dr. Pater Hoilis<lb/>
Soprano- Pianist Duo Perform Recital<lb/>
At ECU's Fletcher Music Center Hall<lb/>
Glee Clubs Sing<lb/>
Holiday Music<lb/>
Traditional and<lb/>
contemporary<lb/>
Christmas choral<lb/>
music will be per-<lb/>
formed by the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Women's and Men's<lb/>
Glee Clubs at their an-<lb/>
nual joint winter con-<lb/>
cert Sunday, Dec. 4,<lb/>
at Immanuel Baptist<lb/>
Church on Elm Street<lb/>
in Greenville. The<lb/>
concert will begin at<lb/>
7:45 p.m. and is free<lb/>
and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
The women's Glee<lb/>
Club, directed by<lb/>
Rhonda Fleming, will<lb/>
present Gregor<lb/>
Aichinger's "Regina<lb/>
Coeli the Tohannes<lb/>
Brahms "Ave<lb/>
Maria three songs<lb/>
from Hoist's "The<lb/>
Princess "Fanfare<lb/>
for Christmas" by<lb/>
Llovd Pfautsch and<lb/>
"Shepherd's Carol"<lb/>
by early American<lb/>
composer William<lb/>
Billings.<lb/>
Pianist Cheryl Kite<lb/>
of Ernul will accom-<lb/>
pany the Women's<lb/>
Glee club.<lb/>
The Men's Glee<lb/>
Club, conducted by<lb/>
Edward Glenn, will<lb/>
present "Brothers,<lb/>
Sing On" by Grieg,<lb/>
Pitoni's "Cantate<lb/>
Domino the Advent<lb/>
hymn, "O Come, O<lb/>
Come, Emanuel<lb/>
"Ivy and Holly" by<lb/>
Moeran and two<lb/>
English carols, "Deck<lb/>
the Hall" and "God<lb/>
Rest Ye Merry,<lb/>
Gentlemen<lb/>
Pianist Scott Sward<lb/>
of Virginia Beach will<lb/>
be accompanist, and<lb/>
soloists will be An-<lb/>
thony Jackson of<lb/>
Washington, D.C<lb/>
Matthew Cox of<lb/>
Manns Harbor and<lb/>
Todd Barnhart of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Concluding the<lb/>
program will be the<lb/>
combined choruses'<lb/>
performance of Healy<lb/>
Willian's "Hodie<lb/>
Christus Natus Est<lb/>
J. S. Bach's "Break<lb/>
Forth, O Beauteous<lb/>
Heavenly Light<lb/>
ShawParker a r -<lb/>
rangements of "Bring<lb/>
a Torch, Jeanette,<lb/>
Isabella "Fum,<lb/>
Fum, Fum" and<lb/>
"Angels We Have<lb/>
Heard on High and<lb/>
Leroy Anderson's<lb/>
"Sleigh Ride<lb/>
Soprano Carla<lb/>
Connors and East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
faculty pianist Dr.<lb/>
Timothy Hoekman<lb/>
will perform in recital<lb/>
Sunday, Dec. 4 at<lb/>
3:30 p.m. in the Flet-<lb/>
cher Music Center<lb/>
Recital Hall.<lb/>
Their program will<lb/>
include five songs by<lb/>
17th century English<lb/>
composer Henry<lb/>
Purcell, the Debussy<lb/>
"Anettes Oubliees<lb/>
an aria from Donizet-<lb/>
ti's "Don Pasquale<lb/>
songs by Granados<lb/>
and Hugo Wolf, and<lb/>
selections from<lb/>
William Bolcom's<lb/>
"Six Songs for<lb/>
Medium Voice<lb/>
Connors and<lb/>
Hoekman have per-<lb/>
formed widely as a<lb/>
duo under the name,<lb/>
"Andiamo Their<lb/>
joint appearances in-<lb/>
cluded a performance<lb/>
at the 1982 World's<lb/>
Fair.<lb/>
Ms. Connors is a<lb/>
doctoral student at<lb/>
the University of<lb/>
Michigan. She has<lb/>
been a soloist with the<lb/>
Detroit Symphony,<lb/>
Szczecin (Poland)<lb/>
Symphony and other<lb/>
orchestras and has<lb/>
sung leading roles in<lb/>
various opera produc-<lb/>
tions, including the<lb/>
role of Anne in The<lb/>
Rake's Progress pro-<lb/>
duction directed by<lb/>
Robert Altman.<lb/>
Dr. Hoekman, who<lb/>
studied at Calvin Col-<lb/>
lege, Peabody Con-<lb/>
servatory and the<lb/>
University of<lb/>
Michigan, has per-<lb/>
formed as a soloist<lb/>
and accompanist in<lb/>
the U.S Canada,<lb/>
Australia and Europe.<lb/>
He was pianist in-<lb/>
residence at the 1982<lb/>
Grand Rapids Sum-<lb/>
merfest where he<lb/>
played for the Joffery<lb/>
Concert Dancers and<lb/>
performed with the<lb/>
orchestra.<lb/>
The Connors-<lb/>
Hoekman recital is<lb/>
free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
.Harde<lb/>
Violinist Shipps<lb/>
Gives ECU Recital<lb/>
Violinist Stephen<lb/>
Shipps, a faculty<lb/>
member at the N.C.<lb/>
School of the Arts,<lb/>
will perform with<lb/>
pianist Paul Tardif<lb/>
and cellist Selma<lb/>
Gokcen of the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
music faculty at a<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 30<lb/>
chamber music con-<lb/>
cert on campus.<lb/>
The concert, set for<lb/>
8.15 p.m. in the Flet-<lb/>
cher Music Center<lb/>
Recital Hall, is free<lb/>
and open to the<lb/>
public. It is sponsored<lb/>
by the ECU School of<lb/>
CABEYOUCAN A?amoN:adtmajijec<lb/>
DEPEND ON. son that's mod ?auer by<lb/>
the woman of fh? Homing Confer, Counselors ore<lb/>
ovooble day ond n?ghf fo support and under-<lb/>
sfand you Your saefy. comfort ond pnvocy are<lb/>
assured by fne coring staff of the Reming Center<lb/>
SBMCfl: ? Tuesday - Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
pointments! 1st &amp; 2nd Trimester Abortions up to<lb/>
18 Weeks ? Free Pregnancy Tests ? Very Earfy<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests ? Alt Inclusive Fees P insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CAL1 7? 1-4550 DAY Oft NtGHl ?<lb/>
THEREMING<lb/>
<lb/>
Music in conjunction<lb/>
with several local<lb/>
business firms.<lb/>
Shipps is a graduate<lb/>
of the Indiana Univer-<lb/>
sity School of Music<lb/>
and has performed<lb/>
with the Cleveland,<lb/>
Seattle and Dallas<lb/>
Symphonies, in addi-<lb/>
tion to serving as con-<lb/>
certmaster for Casals<lb/>
Festival and the Pied-<lb/>
mont Chamber Or-<lb/>
chestra.<lb/>
A member of the<lb/>
Fine Arts String<lb/>
Quartet, he has<lb/>
recorded for Angel<lb/>
Records with flautist<lb/>
Ransom Wilson.<lb/>
The Nov. 30 con-<lb/>
cert will include the<lb/>
Claude Debussy Cello<lb/>
Sonata Trio.<lb/>
Co-sponsorship of<lb/>
the concert was in-<lb/>
itiated by Joseph<lb/>
Gantz, president of<lb/>
Empire Brushes, Inc<lb/>
one of the sponsor<lb/>
firms, and pianist<lb/>
Tardif. Other spon-<lb/>
soring Greenville<lb/>
firms are TRW, Inc<lb/>
Proctor and Gamble,<lb/>
the University Book<lb/>
Exchange, Piano and<lb/>
Organ Distributors<lb/>
and Central Book and<lb/>
News.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
MAKETRACKS FOR THE<lb/>
BEST EATIN'ALL AROUND!<lb/>
The next time you stop by for the Best Eat in bring<lb/>
along this money-savin' coupon.<lb/>
" IsTeakIE6FbTscu1tThd "<lb/>
0mhge juice $1.29<lb/>
p,ease present this coupon be'o'e ordering One coupon per customer per<lb/>
visit please Customer must pay any sales ta? due This coupon not good m<lb/>
combination with any other otters Otter good during reju'ar breakfast hours<lb/>
only at participating Hardee s Restaurants<lb/>
through May 31 1 984<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?Haideesj<lb/>
FINES S MEDIUM SOFT DMIKK SI. 79<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Please present this coupon before ordering One coupon per customer per<lb/>
yisit. please Customer must pay any saies tax due This coupon not good m<lb/>
combination with any other otters Otter good after 10 30 AM only at<lb/>
participating Hardee s Restaurants through<lb/>
May 31 1984<lb/>
VAardeci<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
J<lb/>
Elizabethan-Era<lb/>
Madrigals Sing<lb/>
At Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Condos<lb/>
i<lb/>
520 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-7097<lb/>
HOURS: SUN-THURS llam-9pm<lb/>
FRI&amp;SAT lUm-lOpm<lb/>
1<lb/>
Student singers and<lb/>
musicians from the<lb/>
East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity School of Music<lb/>
will be featured at<lb/>
East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity's eighth annual<lb/>
series of Christmas<lb/>
Madrigal Dinners,<lb/>
Nov. 29-Dec. 5.<lb/>
A production of<lb/>
ECU's Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center and<lb/>
School of Music, the<lb/>
dinners are modeled<lb/>
after a Christmas<lb/>
feast in an English<lb/>
manor house of the<lb/>
Elizabethan era. The<lb/>
music, carols,<lb/>
customs and<lb/>
festivities of the<lb/>
period are presented<lb/>
by performers ands<lb/>
hosts wearing<lb/>
Renaissance<lb/>
costumes, and a tradi-<lb/>
tional roast beef din-<lb/>
ner with wassail is<lb/>
served by authentical-<lb/>
ly clad servants.<lb/>
Dr. Charles Moore<lb/>
of the ECU music<lb/>
faculty is director of<lb/>
the dinner series.<lb/>
Among the carols<lb/>
to be performed by<lb/>
ECU'S Madrigal<lb/>
Singers this year are<lb/>
"The Holly and the<lb/>
Ivy "The Wassail<lb/>
Carol "The Boar's<lb/>
Head Carol "Tom-<lb/>
morrow Shall Be My<lb/>
Dancing Day<lb/>
"How Unto<lb/>
Bethlehem "We<lb/>
Shepherds Sing<lb/>
"The First Noel" and<lb/>
"Good Christian<lb/>
Men, Rejoice<lb/>
The ECU Col-<lb/>
legium Musicum, an<lb/>
ensemble of<lb/>
Renaissance in-<lb/>
strumentalists will<lb/>
present a selection of<lb/>
compositions by early<lb/>
English composers,<lb/>
including a pavane to<lb/>
be danced by the<lb/>
singers.<lb/>
Other entertain-<lb/>
ment will be provided<lb/>
by a court magician, a<lb/>
juggler and a trio of<lb/>
herald trumpeters.<lb/>
Tickets for places at<lb/>
one of the banquet<lb/>
tables may be reserved<lb/>
at the ECU Ticket Of-<lb/>
fice in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center,<lb/>
telephone 757-6611.<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Rib-Eye Steak<lb/>
Salad Bar, Soup<lb/>
Potatoe, Toast<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
At The Campus ?East Carolina University<lb/>
We're building a special place for East Carolina University students to live next to<lb/>
campus in your own private, secure, air-conditioned condominium units. Surrounded on<lb/>
three sides by ECU property, Ringgold Towers is closer to classrooms than some<lb/>
on-campus dormitories.<lb/>
Three floorplans are available, and units are completely furnished. Each unit will be<lb/>
individually owned either by students and their parents or by investors renting to<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Recent changes in tax laws make ownership of this type property advantageous for both<lb/>
investors and parents of students. We'd like to show you how Ringgold Towers can<lb/>
provide a special place for you to live and provide your parents with an excellent<lb/>
investment requiring very little down payment.<lb/>
Ringgold Development Co Inc.<lb/>
105 Commerce Street<lb/>
P.O. Drawer 568<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
(919) 355-2698<lb/>
Vietna<lb/>
Truth<lb/>
InNe<lb/>
(Berkley,<lb/>
December, S3 50)<lb/>
Hailed by the Arm<lb/>
Times as "the best<lb/>
damned book from<lb/>
the point of vie of<lb/>
the infrantrymen who<lb/>
fought there The<lb/>
Killing Zone c<lb/>
five months in the life<lb/>
of Frederick Downs<lb/>
during which time he<lb/>
was a lieutenant in the<lb/>
Army and fough<lb/>
combat in Vietnam<lb/>
He was sent home<lb/>
after accidentally trip-<lb/>
ping a land mine that<lb/>
tore off his left arm.<lb/>
among other injuries<lb/>
His diary tells of the<lb/>
everyday life of an<lb/>
fantry soldier, and<lb/>
the decisions that a<lb/>
man had to make dai-<lb/>
ly in order to survive<lb/>
in a land where<lb/>
friends and enemie<lb/>
looked alike.<lb/>
Downs was onl-<lb/>
when he enlisted<lb/>
the Army. He ser-<lb/>
in the northern region<lb/>
of South Vietnam, a<lb/>
well as the Central<lb/>
Highlands as the co<lb/>
mandcr of an in far.<lb/>
plantoon 77ie Killing<lb/>
Zone is his storj<lb/>
war against a hidden<lb/>
enemy in a hostile en<lb/>
vironment ? and i<lb/>
what happened to<lb/>
men who fought that<lb/>
war. He tells of a wa-<lb/>
in which the an:<lb/>
communist forces<lb/>
not control anyth<lb/>
beyond the groL I<lb/>
they stood on, gaining<lb/>
control during the-j<lb/>
daylight, only to I<lb/>
it as soon as darknes;<lb/>
fell. Roads that haj<lb/>
been cleared of land<lb/>
mines and sniper j<lb/>
day were boobytrap<lb/>
ped again the nev<lb/>
While the American si<lb/>
could win only<lb/>
conquering,<lb/>
enemy could win b<lb/>
simply surviving.<lb/>
Down also tells<lb/>
his homecoming afte<lb/>
his injury. On th<lb/>
campus of a Colorodc<lb/>
university where<lb/>
was enrolled, a ma<lb/>
Eva<lb/>
50i<lb/>
ear<lb/>
lor<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
WW?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057593_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
ire kit,<lb/>
n(h<lb/>
K ?,<lb/>
YE<lb/>
?<lb/>
n<lb/>
I<lb/>
lB?jJ<lb/>
6UuiiT<lb/>
179 <lb/>
I<lb/>
i ' 1<lb/>
,<lb/>
42r?1$G-<lb/>
next to<lb/>
inded on<lb/>
i some<lb/>
It will be<lb/>
ntmg to<lb/>
ror both<lb/>
v.ers can<lb/>
xcellent<lb/>
J<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 29, 1983<lb/>
Vietnam War<lb/>
Truth Told<lb/>
In New Book<lb/>
VIETNAM<lb/>
PLATOON DELTA<lb/>
ONE-SIX.<lb/>
THE WAY IT<lb/>
REALLY WAS.<lb/>
(Berkley,<lb/>
December, $3.50)<lb/>
Hailed by the Army<lb/>
Times as "the best<lb/>
damned book from<lb/>
the point of view of<lb/>
the infrantrymen who<lb/>
fought there The<lb/>
Killing Zone covers<lb/>
five months in the life<lb/>
of Frederick Downs,<lb/>
during which time he<lb/>
was a lieutenant in the<lb/>
Army and fought in<lb/>
combat in Vietnam.<lb/>
He was sent home<lb/>
after accidentally trip-<lb/>
ping a land mine that<lb/>
tore off his left arm,<lb/>
among other injuries.<lb/>
His diary tells of the<lb/>
everyday life of an in-<lb/>
fantry soldier, and of<lb/>
the decisions that a<lb/>
man had to make dai-<lb/>
ly in order to survive<lb/>
in a land where<lb/>
friends and enemies<lb/>
looked alike.<lb/>
Downs was only 23<lb/>
when he enlisted in<lb/>
the Army. He served<lb/>
in the northern region<lb/>
of South Vietnam, as<lb/>
well as the Central<lb/>
Highlands as the com-<lb/>
mander of an infantry<lb/>
plantoon. The Killing<lb/>
Zone is his story of a<lb/>
war against a hidden<lb/>
enemy in a hostile en-<lb/>
vironment ? and of<lb/>
what happened to the<lb/>
men who fought that<lb/>
war. He tells of a war<lb/>
in which the anti-<lb/>
communist forces did<lb/>
not control anything<lb/>
beyond the ground<lb/>
they stood on, gaining<lb/>
control during the<lb/>
daylight, only to lose<lb/>
it as soon as darkness<lb/>
fell. Roads that had<lb/>
been cleared of land<lb/>
mines and snipers one<lb/>
day were boobytrap-<lb/>
ped again the next.<lb/>
While the Americans<lb/>
could win only by<lb/>
conquering, the<lb/>
enemy could win by<lb/>
simply surviving.<lb/>
Down also tells of<lb/>
his homecoming after<lb/>
his injury. On the<lb/>
campus of a Colorodo<lb/>
university where he<lb/>
was enrolled, a man<lb/>
approached him and<lb/>
pointed to Downs' ar-<lb/>
tificial arm. "Get that<lb/>
in Vietman?" he ask-<lb/>
ed. When Downs said<lb/>
yes, the man<lb/>
answered, "Serves<lb/>
you right and walk-<lb/>
ed away.<lb/>
The Killing Zone is a<lb/>
grueling, honest ac-<lb/>
count of the physical,<lb/>
emotional and<lb/>
psychological<lb/>
penalties paid by the<lb/>
soldiers in a combat<lb/>
zone where no civilian<lb/>
was to be trusted,<lb/>
death waited around<lb/>
every tree and even<lb/>
the trip home didn't<lb/>
mean the battle was<lb/>
over.<lb/>
About the author,<lb/>
Frederick Downs<lb/>
was awarded four<lb/>
Purple Hearts, the<lb/>
Bronze Star with<lb/>
Valor and the Silver<lb/>
Star. Since he return-<lb/>
ed from Vietnam, he<lb/>
has been active in the<lb/>
Veterans Administra-<lb/>
tion acting as the<lb/>
director of Prosthetic<lb/>
and Sensory Aid.<lb/>
"A tribute to the<lb/>
courage and sacrifice<lb/>
of human beings<lb/>
under stress, which<lb/>
must include the<lb/>
author and the men to<lb/>
whom the book is<lb/>
dedicated, and also<lb/>
their enemies<lb/>
-The H ashington<lb/>
Post Book World<lb/>
"The best personal<lb/>
narrative to come out<lb/>
of the Vietnam War<lb/>
likely to become a<lb/>
classic.<lb/>
Charles B.<lb/>
McDonald, author of<lb/>
Company Com-<lb/>
mander<lb/>
"Downs has withheld<lb/>
his rage and written a<lb/>
numbing book that is<lb/>
as explicit, as honest,<lb/>
as Ron Kovic's Born<lb/>
on the Fourth of July,<lb/>
but in a completely<lb/>
different way  'This<lb/>
is the way it was for<lb/>
us he says simply,<lb/>
'the platoon of Delta<lb/>
One-six<lb/>
-The New Republic<lb/>
!<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available<lb/>
sale at or below the advertised price in each A4P Store, except a<lb/>
specifically noted in this ad. <lb/>
a for <lb/>
jSgcSSSSifSl &amp;S&amp;A'5g5ggjggUg CM WHOLESALERS.<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEW, WE WILL DOUBLE<lb/>
5 MAmiFACTURER'SCOUPOftt, EXAMPLE. $10PURCHASE 5CJUP0IIS.<lb/>
$20 PURCHASE - 10 COUPOHS, $100 PURCHASE 50 COUPOW.<lb/>
ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE!<lb/>
hMMi now end Dec 3, ?? w? redeem nation<lb/>
manufacturer centa-oft coupon up to 50 tor<lb/>
doubt their value Orter good on national manu-<lb/>
facturers' centa-ofl coupon only (Food retailer<lb/>
coupons not accepted) Cutomf mult purchaaa<lb/>
ATRUE STORY<lb/>
THE BEST DAMNED<lb/>
FROM THE POINT<lb/>
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INFANTRYMEN WHO<lb/>
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FREDERICK<lb/>
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aajasBspsjBBSBi? j w-?-?" ? - ?? ? r<lb/>
coupon product In specified stes Expired coupon<lb/>
l b honored On coupon par customar par<lb/>
I tor trea marchandta<lb/>
wW not be honored. On cour.<lb/>
Mam. Mo coupons accaptad f<lb/>
Oftar doas not apply to AP or othar store coupon<lb/>
whether manufacturer la manttonad or not Whan<lb/>
tha valus of ths coupon e?ceedi 50 or th retail<lb/>
of ths Ham, this oftar Is limited to tha retail price<lb/>
COUPON A<lb/>
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COUPONC<lb/>
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Sariaff an Snat vftt AMF't<lb/>
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&amp; Kappa Sigma Pledges<lb/>
Present<lb/>
Ladies Best Buns Contest<lb/>
WHOLE<lb/>
(16-20 LB. AVG.)<lb/>
SAVE 1.01 LB. I 8AVE3VLB.<lb/>
Chuck Roast I Ground Chuck<lb/>
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Boneless<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
3 lbs. or<lb/>
more Jb<lb/>
Wed. Nov. 30,1983<lb/>
Adm. $1.0018 yr. $2.00<lb/>
8:30-1:00 AM<lb/>
5E.SM SAVE $1,001<lb/>
Happy Hour Prices All Night<lb/>
Prizes<lb/>
1st $125.00 Plus 1 years Free Pass to the Elbo<lb/>
2nd75.00 Plus 1 years Free Pass to the Elbo<lb/>
3rd $50.00 Plus 1 years Free Pass to the Elbo<lb/>
Sponsored by:<lb/>
Jobbie 's Gym<lb/>
Western Steer<lb/>
The Flower Basket<lb/>
Harbin Highlander Center<lb/>
The Curtain Shop<lb/>
Crow's best<lb/>
W. W. Simpson<lb/>
F. D. Haoens<lb/>
Venter's GrUI<lb/>
Theresa's Card A Gift Shop<lb/>
McKenxi Stcurity<lb/>
Huckleberry's<lb/>
Hatteras Hammocks<lb/>
Sautihts<lb/>
MU-Pak<lb/>
Blake O'Connor<lb/>
SAVE $1.00 i " SAVE70' <lb/>
Rome Apples White Grapefruit<lb/>
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PMNfr '5,99?<lb/>
Savings u<lb/>
SAVE2V TaaVHUIlL'Kmr- SAVE 20'<lb/>
Pillsbury Flour I Morton Pot Pies<lb/>
PLAIN ? BREAD ? SELF RISING<lb/>
CHICKEN ? BEEF ? TURKEY<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT .<lb/>
RIBS!<lb/>
RIBS!<lb/>
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SAVE 15' EACH<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057593_0010"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
THfc EASTCAROl INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 29, 1983 Page 10<lb/>
Bucs Win Season Opener<lb/>
?<lb/>
Smith Proves Harrison Right<lb/>
Now everybody can see why<lb/>
ECU basketball coach Charlie<lb/>
Harrison said he felt good about<lb/>
starting freshman Roy Smith<lb/>
before the team's season began.<lb/>
The 6-7 12, 190-pound center<lb/>
scored 18 points and pulled down<lb/>
12 rebounds to lead the Pirates to<lb/>
a 75-66 win over Campbell<lb/>
University Saturday night in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
I eading 45-32 at halftime, the<lb/>
Pirates ran into some trouble<lb/>
when they returned to the court<lb/>
for final period play. During the<lb/>
next 10 minutes, the Bucs made<lb/>
only three baskets and a free<lb/>
throw.<lb/>
The Campbell Camels took ad-<lb/>
vantage and cut the lead to just<lb/>
three points, 51-48, with less than<lb/>
11 minutes left in the game. ECU<lb/>
freshman forward Derrick Battle<lb/>
came to the rescue, however, scor-<lb/>
ing on a three-point play to up the<lb/>
Bucs" lead, 54-48.<lb/>
The Pirate defense then con-<lb/>
trolled the game and continued to<lb/>
protect its lead offensively. With<lb/>
2:58 on the clock, the Pirates were<lb/>
ahead, 70-56.<lb/>
Harrison's "defense wins<lb/>
games" lectures apparently paid<lb/>
off. "When they want to, they<lb/>
can really 'D' it up, can't they0"<lb/>
Harrison said. "If we had just<lb/>
had some shots go early (in the se-<lb/>
:ond half), it wouldn't have been<lb/>
so tough.<lb/>
"Then, the defense could have<lb/>
gotten some momentum, but at<lb/>
least the effort was still there<lb/>
a hen things got rough<lb/>
Harrison praised the defensive<lb/>
play of freshman William Grady<lb/>
and Curt Vanderhorst, as well as<lb/>
the rest of the team. "They all<lb/>
plaved hard, but I expect that<lb/>
he said. "If they keep playing that<lb/>
hard, they're going to get better<lb/>
The Pirates blocked eight shots<lb/>
and had 10 steals. "That's what I<lb/>
want for 40 minutes Harrison<lb/>
said, "but some of there guys are<lb/>
young, and they still have mental<lb/>
lapses<lb/>
In the first half, the Pirates<lb/>
jumped out to a quick lead and<lb/>
the Camels never were able to tie<lb/>
the game up. Campbell, however,<lb/>
did cut the lead to one on three oc-<lb/>
casions. Camel Harvey Smith<lb/>
sank a 20-foot shot to narrow the<lb/>
Pirates' lead to 17-16, but the<lb/>
Bucs began pulling away. A<lb/>
basket by Vanderhorst on a goal-<lb/>
tending call and two free throws<lb/>
by Wright gave the Pirates the<lb/>
edge.<lb/>
A long string of freethrows by<lb/>
Barry Wright, Keith Sledge, and<lb/>
David Harris allowed the Bucs to<lb/>
gain a nine-point lead.<lb/>
Then a streak by the Bucs with<lb/>
Wright, Smith and Vanderhorst<lb/>
scoring, extended ECU's lead to<lb/>
41-24?the Pirates biggest edge<lb/>
yet.<lb/>
The Camels fought back and<lb/>
cut the lead to 11 by halftime.<lb/>
Harrison said the Pirates' 45-32<lb/>
halftime lead should have been<lb/>
even larger. "We could have<lb/>
beenup by 20 in the first half<lb/>
Harrison said. "Or we could have<lb/>
built up a 20-point lead in the se-<lb/>
OARY PATTMSOW??CU P??to Lab<lb/>
Head Basketball Coach Charlie Harrison was somwhat pleased with<lb/>
his team's defensive play, but said the Pirates need to be more consis-<lb/>
tent in the games to come.<lb/>
cond half, but we just couldn't hit<lb/>
the shots<lb/>
Harrison said he expected<lb/>
Campbell to come out with a few<lb/>
changes in the second half. "They<lb/>
threw lots of junk defenses at us<lb/>
and that broke our rhythm he<lb/>
said. "We're playing a lot of<lb/>
young kids and they was a dif-<lb/>
ferent defense every time down<lb/>
the court<lb/>
Following Smith's 18 points,<lb/>
Wright followed with 16 points<lb/>
and Vanderhorst had 12 for the<lb/>
Bucs.<lb/>
Clarence Grier scored 25 for the<lb/>
Camels, while Rene Parker added<lb/>
12. ECU held Junior College<lb/>
transfer Andrea McGce, who was<lb/>
expecting to be Campbell's scor-<lb/>
ing leader this year, to just four<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Now 1-0, Harrison said he saw<lb/>
some things in this year's opener<lb/>
that he didn't see last season.<lb/>
"They went to the offensive<lb/>
boards much better, and they<lb/>
were defensively intimidating in-<lb/>
side he said. "But at the same<lb/>
time, they gave up too much more<lb/>
easy stuff<lb/>
The Bucs shot 30 percent in the<lb/>
second half, but finished with a<lb/>
43.9 overall percentage. In the<lb/>
first half, ECU shot 59.3 percent<lb/>
from the floor.<lb/>
Campbell finished with a 47.4<lb/>
shooting average, and ECU slight-<lb/>
ly out-rebounded the Camels,<lb/>
40-38.<lb/>
The Pirates play Christopher<lb/>
Newport Wednesday night, and<lb/>
Harrison said the Bucs will have<lb/>
to be more consistent in the games<lb/>
which lie ahead.<lb/>
"We've got to get more than six<lb/>
or seven minutes of good basket-<lb/>
ball in a row he said.<lb/>
Gametime is 7:30 p.m. at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
ECU forward Barry Wright, who scored 16 points, was the Pirates' se-<lb/>
cond leading scorer against Campbell Saturday night.<lb/>
Lady Rats Split Road Games<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Ajatotaat Sport Editor<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball<lb/>
team split a pair of games over the<lb/>
weekend, losing to Saint Peters,<lb/>
77-52, and defeating lona, 51-39.<lb/>
"We're very pleased with the<lb/>
wav we came back after our loss<lb/>
Saturday to St. Peters ECU<lb/>
coach Cathy Andruzzi said. "We<lb/>
needed to bounce back strong,<lb/>
and we're happy to come out of<lb/>
the road trip 2-1 ECU's other<lb/>
victory was the previous weekend<lb/>
against George Washington.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates were in the<lb/>
game against St. Peters until they<lb/>
lost control midway through the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
Sylvia Bragg connected on a<lb/>
jumper with 13:25 remaining to<lb/>
trim the score to 40-36, but the<lb/>
Peahens pulled away with an 18-4<lb/>
scoring tear over the next nine<lb/>
minutes to put the game away.<lb/>
ECU was led offensively by<lb/>
Bragg with 17 points, while Lisa<lb/>
Squirewell, Darlene Hedges and<lb/>
Delphine Mabry all had eight.<lb/>
Squirewell was the game's leading<lb/>
rebounder with 11.<lb/>
Against lona, the Pirates went<lb/>
on their own tear, outscoring the<lb/>
Gaels 18-2 in the game's final<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
ECU led 24-22 at the half, and<lb/>
the game remained clos until the<lb/>
Pirate defense stiffened and shut<lb/>
down Iona's inside game.<lb/>
Andruzzi was very pleased with<lb/>
her team's play after the game.<lb/>
"There's such a team atmosphere<lb/>
this season, and the chemistry is<lb/>
what we want<lb/>
Junior college transfer Anita<lb/>
Anderson led the Pirates with 13<lb/>
points. Squirewell had her second<lb/>
straight 11-rebound game, and<lb/>
now has 31 in just three games.<lb/>
The Pirates' will be in action<lb/>
again this Thursday when they<lb/>
travel to play Fayetteville State.<lb/>
Mabry Giant<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
VmMui Soorti EdMor<lb/>
OARY ??ATTBH$OH??CU ??ll?tQ Lab<lb/>
Sophomore Lisa Squirewell takes a jumpshot in the lane against a St.<lb/>
Peters player during the Pirates' Thanksgiving trip to New York.<lb/>
Squirewell scored eight points and grabbed 11 rebounds.<lb/>
Long Becomes ECU's<lb/>
First Kodak A-A Ever<lb/>
ECU offensive guard Terry<lb/>
Long has been named to the<lb/>
Kodak First-Team Ail-American<lb/>
squad ? the first player in ECU<lb/>
history to ever receive the honor.<lb/>
Long was also an ECU first<lb/>
when he was named to the Walter<lb/>
Camp Football Foundation all-<lb/>
America team last week. Long<lb/>
and 23 other players from across<lb/>
the country are on the squad. The<lb/>
camp all-America team is the<lb/>
oldest of all the all-star teams,<lb/>
dating back to its start by a Yale<lb/>
coach in 1889.<lb/>
A senior from Columbia, S. C,<lb/>
Long has been heralded all season<lb/>
as 'the strongest player in the na-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
The 6-0, 280-pound senior<lb/>
guard is one of 20 Pirate seniors<lb/>
who led the team to an 8-3 finish<lb/>
and a spot in the Associated<lb/>
Ptcss' Top Twenty rankings last<lb/>
week. The Pirates have been rank-<lb/>
ed 19th twice in Sports Illustrated<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Long was an honorable men-<lb/>
tion all-America player last year<lb/>
and was also named to the all-<lb/>
Southern Independent team.<lb/>
Long has been invited to play in<lb/>
two all-star games. He will play in<lb/>
the Blue-Gray Classic in Mon-<lb/>
tgomery, Ala on Dec. 25 and<lb/>
will appear in the Hula Bowl in<lb/>
Honolulu on Jan. 7.<lb/>
Long won the North Carolina<lb/>
Powerlifting Championships in<lb/>
1982 by lifting 837 pounds in the<lb/>
squad, 501 pounds in the ben-<lb/>
chpress and a dead lift of 865<lb/>
pounds. Long's total of 2,203<lb/>
pounds ranked as the third highest<lb/>
total ever in the world.<lb/>
Long, who can now benchpress<lb/>
550 pounds, should reap even<lb/>
more honors in the future.<lb/>
With only 14 games of ex-<lb/>
perience on the collegiate level,<lb/>
sophomore Delphine Mabry is ex-<lb/>
pected to be one of the star per-<lb/>
formers on this year's ECU<lb/>
women's basketball team.<lb/>
As a 5-4 freshman, Mabry<lb/>
wasn't expected to play basketball<lb/>
for the Pirates at all. She came to<lb/>
ECU on a track scholarship. "I've<lb/>
always liked basketball more then<lb/>
track explained Mabry, "bull<lb/>
just happen to be best in track<lb/>
Mabry liked basketball so much<lb/>
better that she decided to sit out<lb/>
the entire indoor track season so<lb/>
she could try her luck as a walk-on<lb/>
for the basketball team.<lb/>
Mabry was an immediate suc-<lb/>
cess, starting in 10 of 14 games for<lb/>
the Pirates. She averaged 7.3<lb/>
points per game while shooting 47<lb/>
percent from the field.<lb/>
Head Coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
called Mabry one of the biggest<lb/>
suprises of last season. "She came<lb/>
here with us not really knowing<lb/>
what to expect from her and turn-<lb/>
ed into a starter after just four<lb/>
games.<lb/>
"Delphine played behind some<lb/>
great players in high school and<lb/>
was never able to show her true<lb/>
ability Andruzzi added.<lb/>
Everything was going great for<lb/>
Mabry until she was struck by an<lb/>
injury in mid-season. "I was hit in<lb/>
the hand when we were playing<lb/>
Old Dominion, but I really didn't<lb/>
think much of it at the time<lb/>
Mabry explained.<lb/>
She played with tape on her<lb/>
hand for the next few games, but<lb/>
it wasn't until Mabry lost control<lb/>
of the movement in one of her<lb/>
fingers that she decided to consult<lb/>
a doctor.<lb/>
The prognosis was torn<lb/>
ligaments, and Mabry was faced<lb/>
with her biggest decision while at<lb/>
ECU. She could have surgery im-<lb/>
mediately, or have her hand<lb/>
heavily taped and have the opera-<lb/>
tion at the conclusion of basket-<lb/>
ball season.<lb/>
"If I waited I would have miss-<lb/>
ed three weeks of the track<lb/>
season Mabry said. "I came<lb/>
here for track, and since I already<lb/>
missed the indoor season I decid-<lb/>
ed to have surgery right away<lb/>
Mabry was equally impressive<lb/>
in her debut as a trackster, winn-<lb/>
ing almost every meet she entered<lb/>
in the 800-meters. At the George<lb/>
Mason Invitational in Fairfax,<lb/>
Va Mabry set a meet record in<lb/>
2:11.6 and just missed qualifying<lb/>
for the nationals by .01 of a se-<lb/>
cond.<lb/>
Although Mabry was con-<lb/>
sidered a candidate for the 1984<lb/>
Olympics, she's afraid the pro-<lb/>
blems from last year are going to<lb/>
carry over and affect her chances<lb/>
of making it to the games.<lb/>
Last year's coach, Pat<lb/>
McGuigan, left ECU in a sea of<lb/>
controversy after being accused of<lb/>
tampering into her players' per-<lb/>
sonal lives. Only five people<lb/>
returned, and this year Mabry will<lb/>
have to run in several events in-<lb/>
stead of just concentrating on the<lb/>
800-meters.<lb/>
Although Mabry is still going to<lb/>
try to make the Olympic team,<lb/>
basketball is the only sport she's<lb/>
concerned with right now. Mabry<lb/>
is only one of four returning<lb/>
players for the Lady Pirates, but<lb/>
she she still thinks the team can<lb/>
have a successful year.<lb/>
"We should have an advantage<lb/>
over the taller teams we play she<lb/>
said. "We have a lot of fast<lb/>
players, and our style of play is<lb/>
geared to a quick tempo<lb/>
Mabry's quickness is one of the<lb/>
main reasons Andruzzi is having<lb/>
her start at point guard this year.<lb/>
"Delphine has all the tools to<lb/>
develop into an excellent player<lb/>
Andruzzi said. "She's a very hard<lb/>
worker, and the only way for her<lb/>
to go is up<lb/>
One thing Mabry said she<lb/>
would really like to get up is the<lb/>
team's record. "Last year we<lb/>
finished at 12-14, but I'm pretty<lb/>
sure we can have a winning season<lb/>
this year<lb/>
If Delphine Mabry can continue<lb/>
to play as she has in the past, a<lb/>
winning record should certainly<lb/>
be in the Lady Pirates' future.<lb/>
Head Coach Cath nd<lb/>
team's sta in New Y i<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
B GARY<lb/>
PATTERSON<lb/>
jpirMl To rw tv arooaiu<lb/>
Although the L<lb/>
Pirate basketball team<lb/>
was a long wa<lb/>
home during<lb/>
Thanksgiving<lb/>
holidays, they still en-<lb/>
joyed a heartv.a-<lb/>
stay in Neu "t<lb/>
In fact, when the<lb/>
Pirates took on St.<lb/>
Peters and lona. there<lb/>
were just as ma<lb/>
cheering<lb/>
as the other<lb/>
I<lb/>
fans<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
teams<lb/>
For<lb/>
years.<lb/>
the pav' '<lb/>
the Presenta-<lb/>
tion Sisters House has<lb/>
been the headquarters<lb/>
for the Lady Rats.<lb/>
And each year,<lb/>
nuns support the<lb/>
Lady Pirates by cheer-<lb/>
ing them on at their<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Freshman plaer<lb/>
Lynn Nance said she<lb/>
enjoyed the at-<lb/>
mosphere and<lb/>
fellowship of the -<lb/>
Jordan, Hi<lb/>
Chattanoo<lb/>
CHAPEL HILI .<lb/>
N.C. (LTD - T<lb/>
ranked N<lb/>
Carolina, sparked b<lb/>
the spectacular dunks<lb/>
of All-America<lb/>
Michael Jordan, turn-<lb/>
ed serious midwa<lb/>
through the second<lb/>
half Monda to break<lb/>
open a one-point<lb/>
game and went on to<lb/>
beat Tenne-ee-<lb/>
Chattanooga 85-63<lb/>
Jordan finished the<lb/>
night with 28 pom<lb/>
20 of them in the se-<lb/>
cond half. Brad<lb/>
Daugherty and Sam<lb/>
Perkins each had 16<lb/>
The All-America<lb/>
Perkins did not start<lb/>
the game and sat out<lb/>
the first five minutes<lb/>
as punishment for be<lb/>
ing five minutes late<lb/>
to the pre-game meal.<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Chattanooga as led<lb/>
by Gerald Wilkms' 19<lb/>
points. Willie White<lb/>
had 12 points and<lb/>
Stanford Strickland<lb/>
had 11.<lb/>
Trailing 33-30 at<lb/>
the half, the Moc-<lb/>
casins pulled to within<lb/>
one point, 47-46.<lb/>
before the Tar Heels<lb/>
began pulling away.<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
outscored the Mocs<lb/>
? i? m? .iHt<lb/>
?pmp&amp;l<lb/>
iiiii i rtauMwriittTTT<lb/>
<pb facs="00057593_0011"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
T<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 29, 19t3<lb/>
11<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
Its, was the Pirates' se-<lb/>
night.<lb/>
mes<lb/>
was very pleased with<lb/>
play after the game.<lb/>
;ch a team atmosphere<lb/>
and the chemistry is<lb/>
ant<lb/>
llege transfer Anita<lb/>
: the Pirates with 13<lb/>
resell had her second<lb/>
rebound game, and<lb/>
just three games.<lb/>
tes' will be in action<lb/>
Thursda when they<lb/>
lav Favetteville State.<lb/>
uad<lb/>
id our style of play is<lb/>
quick tempo<lb/>
quickness is one of the<lb/>
r Andruzzi is having<lb/>
point guard this year.<lb/>
has all the tools to<lb/>
o an excellent player<lb/>
ud. "She's a very hard<lb/>
Id the only way for her<lb/>
I Mabry said she<lb/>
like to get up is the<lb/>
rd. Last year we<lb/>
12-14, but I'm pretty<lb/>
have a winning season<lb/>
ne Mabry can continue<lb/>
jshe has in the past, a<lb/>
:ord should certainly<lb/>
dy Pirates' future.<lb/>
<lb/>
X<lb/>
ATTCtOW??CU MM Ml<lb/>
io?? ball in Saturday's<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
with the<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Head Coach Cathy Andnizzi serves a little holiday spirit to ECU players Sylvia BraggOeft) and Lisa Squirewell during the<lb/>
team's stay in New York over Thanksgiving.<lb/>
Pirates Enjoy Nuns<lb/>
By GARY<lb/>
PATTERSON<lb/>
S????! To The EM I irofcuaa<lb/>
Although the Lady<lb/>
Pirate basketball team<lb/>
was a long way from<lb/>
home during the<lb/>
Thanksgiving<lb/>
holidays, they still en-<lb/>
joyed a heartwarming<lb/>
stay in New York.<lb/>
In fact, when the<lb/>
Pirates took on St.<lb/>
Peters and lona, there<lb/>
were just as many<lb/>
fans cheering for<lb/>
ECU as the other<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
For the past five<lb/>
years, the Presenta-<lb/>
tion Sisters House has<lb/>
been the headquarters<lb/>
for the Lady Rats.<lb/>
And each year, the<lb/>
nuns support the<lb/>
Lady Pirates by cheer-<lb/>
ing them on at their<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Freshman player<lb/>
Lynn Nance said she<lb/>
enjoyed the at-<lb/>
mosphere and<lb/>
fellowship of the con-<lb/>
vent. "The sisters<lb/>
make us so<lb/>
welcome she said.<lb/>
The team enjoyed a<lb/>
lavish Thanksgiving<lb/>
dinner with turkey<lb/>
and all the trimmings<lb/>
prepared by the nuns.<lb/>
According to An-<lb/>
druzzi, the yearly<lb/>
Thanksgiving trip just<lb/>
wouldn't be the same<lb/>
without the convent.<lb/>
"Once we did stay in<lb/>
a hotel, and the kids<lb/>
were miserable at four<lb/>
to a room she said.<lb/>
"There is no at-<lb/>
mosphere at a hotel,<lb/>
and here at the con-<lb/>
vent we feel we are at<lb/>
home.<lb/>
"The fellowship the<lb/>
sisters provide is an<lb/>
important part of our<lb/>
success here. I don't<lb/>
know what we would<lb/>
do without their sup-<lb/>
port. We love them so<lb/>
much<lb/>
The Presentation<lb/>
house is a facility for<lb/>
sick and aging nuns.<lb/>
They are taken care of<lb/>
by the younger nuns<lb/>
who are taking their<lb/>
first vows with the<lb/>
church.<lb/>
According to Sister<lb/>
Cathy Hollywood,<lb/>
however, there is<lb/>
always room for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates. "The<lb/>
Thanksgiving<lb/>
holidays are a time of<lb/>
togetherness and<lb/>
prayer for the good<lb/>
fortunes the Lord<lb/>
provides she said.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
enjoy the family at-<lb/>
mosphere we provide,<lb/>
and the sisters enjoy<lb/>
the company of the<lb/>
girls.<lb/>
" Some of the nuns<lb/>
have no family to<lb/>
share Thanksgiving<lb/>
with, and they really<lb/>
look forward to shar-<lb/>
ing this special holi-<lb/>
day with the Lady<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
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Jordan, Heels Dunk<lb/>
Chattanooga Mocs<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL,<lb/>
N.C. (UPI) ? Top-<lb/>
ranked North<lb/>
Carolina, sparked by<lb/>
the spectacular dunks<lb/>
of All-America<lb/>
Michael Jordan, turn-<lb/>
ed serious midway<lb/>
through the second<lb/>
half Monday to break<lb/>
open a one-point<lb/>
game and went on to<lb/>
beat Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga 85-63.<lb/>
Jordan finished the<lb/>
night with 28 points,<lb/>
20 of them in the se-<lb/>
cond half. Brad<lb/>
Daugherty and Sam<lb/>
Perkins each had 16.<lb/>
The All-America<lb/>
Perkins did not start<lb/>
the game and sat out<lb/>
the first five minutes<lb/>
as punishment for be-<lb/>
ing five minutes late<lb/>
to the pre-game meal.<lb/>
Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga was led<lb/>
by Gerald Wilkins' 19<lb/>
points. Willie White<lb/>
had 12 points and<lb/>
Stanford Strickland<lb/>
had 11.<lb/>
Trailing 33-30 at<lb/>
the half, the Moc-<lb/>
casins pulled to within<lb/>
one point, 47-46,<lb/>
before the Tar Heels<lb/>
began pulling away.<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
outscored the Mocs<lb/>
22-4 to make it 69-50.<lb/>
Jordan led the charge<lb/>
with eight points.<lb/>
At the opening of<lb/>
the second half, the<lb/>
Mocs got two straight<lb/>
baskets from Chris<lb/>
McCray and Wilkins<lb/>
to take a 34-33 lead.<lb/>
A basket by Jordan<lb/>
13 seconds later gave<lb/>
North Carolina the<lb/>
lead again.<lb/>
Tennessee - Chat-<lb/>
tanooga managed to<lb/>
get the lead one more<lb/>
time, 38-37, on a<lb/>
basket by Wilkins<lb/>
with 17:21 remaining,<lb/>
but again, Jordan hit<lb/>
a shot to give North<lb/>
Carolina the lead, this<lb/>
time for good.<lb/>
In the first half,<lb/>
Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga twice<lb/>
managed to tie the<lb/>
score but could never<lb/>
take the lead.<lb/>
A shot by James<lb/>
Hunter tied it at 22-22<lb/>
with 6:26 left in the<lb/>
first period. Perkins<lb/>
pulled the Tar Heels<lb/>
ahead, but the Mocs<lb/>
again tied it at 24-24<lb/>
with 4:34 to go.<lb/>
Kenny Smith then<lb/>
hit two straight<lb/>
baskets to put the Tar<lb/>
Heels out of trouble<lb/>
in the first half.<lb/>
SOUTH PARK<lb/>
MAYTAG<lb/>
EQUIPPED<lb/>
LAUNDRY<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
410 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-3023 ? 24 MRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHEL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
U-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
JUNIOR EXECS<lb/>
ARE YOU NEW IN THE JOB MARKET<lb/>
SALARY<lb/>
Starts" S17.2UO - S24.1UU increasing<lb/>
annually to !?8,600 - $44,800 in four<lb/>
years.<lb/>
QUALIFICATIONS<lb/>
College "yrads, H degrees and degree<lb/>
levels considered. Recent grads looking<lb/>
for first jon as well as those<lb/>
contemplating a job change (under age<lb/>
2H) are encouraged to apply. Required<lb/>
to pass nental and physical exams.<lb/>
BENEFITS<lb/>
Full medical, dental, unlimited sick<lb/>
leave, 30 days annual paid vacation,<lb/>
post grad education programs and<lb/>
retirement in 2l years!<lb/>
,108<lb/>
Positions are still available in the<lb/>
following areas: Management (technical<lb/>
and non-technical). Engineering,<lb/>
Nuclear, Teaching, intelligence.<lb/>
Aviation Management, Diving, Pilots,<lb/>
Finance, Personnel Management. Worldwide<lb/>
locations - we pay relocation expenses.<lb/>
If you're interested in finding out<lb/>
more, see the llavy Officer Programs<lb/>
Team, they Ml he on campus jjMtoyemher -<lb/>
1 0ocr?rer" "?t theTtudent Union IT "you<lb/>
can't makVTt, send your resume or<lb/>
transcripts to:<lb/>
ROYSARVIS<lb/>
U.S. NA VY OFFICER PROGRAMS<lb/>
1001 Navaho Dr. Raleigh, NC 270<lb/>
or call 1-000-442-7231<lb/>
9am ? 3pm, MON THURS<lb/>
.75 Wash<lb/>
.25 for 25 minutes on Dryer<lb/>
Always clean, Air conditioned<lb/>
35 Washers, 35 Dryers<lb/>
L ow Prices Drop-off Service<lb/>
OFFER LIMITED TO<lb/>
PER CUSTOMER<lb/>
ADDRESS<lb/>
STATE-<lb/>
ZIP-<lb/>
DATE.<lb/>
II store is unattended deposit coupon m special container provided Refund mm be mated<lb/>
THIS COUPON REDEEMABLE ONLY AT<lb/>
South Park Home Style Laundry<lb/>
Coupon good only Tues. 29th thru FrL 2nd<lb/>
Maytag DIAL-A-FABRIC equipped store<lb/>
FofmCL-M<lb/>
Located Behind<lb/>
Ramada Inn next to<lb/>
Sandwich Game<lb/>
Video Arcade.<lb/>
ea<lb/>
St<lb/>
"??<lb/>
HI M?y0li ?jp?A.?lUU<lb/>
-It 3<lb/>
<pb facs="00057593_0012"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 29, 1983<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU'S Long Makes<lb/>
Ail-American Team<lb/>
ROCHESTER,<lb/>
N.Y. (UPI) -<lb/>
Nebraska running<lb/>
back Mike Rozier led<lb/>
all vote-getters while<lb/>
being named to the<lb/>
American Football<lb/>
Coaches Association<lb/>
1983 All-America<lb/>
football team for the<lb/>
second straight year.<lb/>
Rozier was joined<lb/>
by two Nebraska<lb/>
teammates, flanker<lb/>
Irving Fryar and<lb/>
guard Dean<lb/>
Steinhuhler, on of-<lb/>
fense. Other repeaters<lb/>
on the AFCA team<lb/>
are Brigham Young<lb/>
tight end Gordon<lb/>
Hudson, Georgia<lb/>
defensive back Terry<lb/>
Hoage and Arizona<lb/>
linebacker Rickey<lb/>
Hunley.<lb/>
Rozier was follow-<lb/>
ed in the voting by<lb/>
Brigham Young<lb/>
quarterback Steve<lb/>
Young. Auburn's Bo<lb/>
Jackson, the only<lb/>
sophomore named to<lb/>
the team, rounds out<lb/>
thebackfield.<lb/>
Rounding out the<lb/>
offense were Baylor<lb/>
wide receiver Gerald<lb/>
McNeil and linemen<lb/>
Bill Fralic of Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh, Terry Long of<lb/>
East Carolina, Doug<lb/>
Dawson of Texas and<lb/>
Tom Dixon of<lb/>
Michigan. Bruce<lb/>
Kallmeyer of Kansas<lb/>
is the kicker.<lb/>
Joining Hoage and<lb/>
Hunley on defense are<lb/>
linemen Ricky Bryan<lb/>
of Oklahoma,<lb/>
William Fuller of<lb/>
North Carolina,<lb/>
Bruce Smith of<lb/>
Virginia Tech and<lb/>
Reggie White of Ten-<lb/>
nessee; linebackers<lb/>
Wilber Marshall of<lb/>
Florida and Ron<lb/>
Rivera of Cal-<lb/>
Berkeley; and backs<lb/>
Russell Carter of<lb/>
Southern Methodist,<lb/>
Jerry Gray of Texas<lb/>
and Don Rogers of<lb/>
UCLA. The punter is<lb/>
Randall Cunningham<lb/>
of Nevada-Las Vegas.<lb/>
Rozier averaged<lb/>
over 160 yards<lb/>
rushing per game<lb/>
while leading<lb/>
Nebraska to a No. 1<lb/>
ranking all season<lb/>
long and helped the<lb/>
Cornhuskers become<lb/>
the highest scoring<lb/>
college team ever.<lb/>
Averaging 7.8 yards<lb/>
per carry, Rozier<lb/>
gained 2,148 yards<lb/>
and set an NCAA<lb/>
record with 29<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
Young, who leads<lb/>
the nation in passing<lb/>
and total yards, com-<lb/>
pleted 70.3 percent of<lb/>
his passes for 3,634<lb/>
yards and 27<lb/>
touchdowns. He has<lb/>
also rushed for 450<lb/>
yards in helping BYU<lb/>
to the nation's top of-<lb/>
fense in total yards.<lb/>
Steinkuhler, at<lb/>
6-foot-3, 270 pounds,<lb/>
is a top candidate for<lb/>
the Outland Trophy<lb/>
and Lombardi Award<lb/>
given to the nation's<lb/>
top lineman.<lb/>
Fralic is the only<lb/>
junior on the offense.<lb/>
Smith, Gray and Cun-<lb/>
ningham are also<lb/>
juniors. The rest ofj<lb/>
the team, outside of<lb/>
Jackson, are seniors.<lb/>
Gray leads the<lb/>
Texas defense that is<lb/>
tops in the nation<lb/>
while Smithl<lb/>
spearheads Virginis<lb/>
Tech's No. 1 defense<lb/>
against the rush.<lb/>
The AFCA All<lb/>
America team is spon-<lb/>
sored by Kodak.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
7S0-S434.<lb/>
FO SALl: 1?71 Olds Oelfa M<lb/>
?ir, new brakes, Sfeel r?dl?U.<lb/>
very peed mchantci condition.<lb/>
m. Can 11-rru. <lb/>
FO? SALE: Perteole mini<lb/>
stereo component system selllno<lb/>
tor US. Call 7?0-e?77.<lb/>
FOR SALt: One towiHi carat<lb/>
diamond rtne wit M carat ooW<lb/>
band. La?s that I yaar old Ek-<lb/>
callont condition SIM. Call<lb/>
7S1-4M1.<lb/>
OKT IN SHAPE: YOU Ot 4<lb/>
visits to each ot ttto prominent<lb/>
health clubs in the Oroenvllle<lb/>
art. Thets 14 visits lor only<lb/>
Sl0.ee. Contact Kim C at<lb/>
7S0-M01. .<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE:<lb/>
wanted to share one bedroom<lb/>
apt. prefer non-smoker and non<lb/>
drinker. Mer part of rent,<lb/>
telephone, and utilities would be<lb/>
Site. per month. Two btockes<lb/>
from campus. Telephone<lb/>
750-177. Available immediate-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
Kappa Sta's. after 7ft Dmy Afttt-<lb/>
party, ust a word to let all of<lb/>
vev know that a pood planet Is<lb/>
hard to find, lets net Mow this<lb/>
one(we'li let David O. drive it).<lb/>
Also, Formal Is this weekln I<lb/>
don't want to see any mushroom<lb/>
ctcuds or any sub-iero radioac-<lb/>
tive fo laHlne near the beach<lb/>
?? there or be sctepenal. Two<lb/>
Fun Man.<lb/>
THANKS) Anpn E Omous. Love<lb/>
Yost. DJR <lb/>
JANE: I nope I dent swtafl to<lb/>
hard to break the vine. Yew<lb/>
knew your nest H Me best. TAR<lb/>
IAN.<lb/>
"LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOWEST TYPING RATES on<lb/>
campus include experienced<lb/>
professional work. Pro<lb/>
ofreadine, spelling and oram-<lb/>
matlcal corrections JSS-4740<lb/>
after i M <lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING.<lb/>
35MW<lb/>
ACADEMIC AND PROFES<lb/>
SIONAL typlnf. Call Julia<lb/>
Bloodworm at 704-7074.<lb/>
TYPING. TERM, THESIS,<lb/>
7S4-04OJ<lb/>
TYPING: Ru?" Jobs-Eveninfls.<lb/>
Scientific symbol element. Pro-<lb/>
feasional. Call 70417.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL Typing ser-<lb/>
vice: ekperlence, quality war.<lb/>
IBM selectric typewriter. Call<lb/>
Lanle Shlvo 7S-SI.<lb/>
ATTENTION ECU skiers and<lb/>
sunbethers January Vermont<lb/>
ski weeks from S171. Sprint<lb/>
break Florida weeks from Sll.<lb/>
Call far yourself or orlglnlte a<lb/>
arowp and travel free. Luv tours<lb/>
at-hi mi. Ask far Laura.<lb/>
THE TECH SHOP: We're en the<lb/>
corner of 144) and Charles. We<lb/>
sail stereo maintenance service.<lb/>
PALM READER, lne?pensivo<lb/>
WMgjb<lb/>
WIN sim.Mii Came to Hearts<lb/>
YO. BVERYONEI ECU Hlllel<lb/>
- ?j a chanukah<lb/>
at the Methodist stw-<lb/>
LOST; East Atlantic Resorts tmi cmHr Mv M ,t 7:J p.m.<lb/>
Mis hook; Mtnerta oelfwsiioHM j sjgkMsejMaR will Include me<lb/>
attachment, no asset ens asked sjesjfjsjg of me mmera. Israeli<lb/>
Wishjmad. eejfl Hebre feed and mesie and a<lb/>
WANTED <lb/>
of chanukah Find<lb/>
what the festtvel of liebts is<lb/>
?or Jen. Can move in end of Dee<lb/>
?7S per month, one feerth<lb/>
As Call<lb/>
IS years ef<lb/>
Call 7Se-eO.<lb/>
. - - - -r <lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Loin<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, December 3,1983<lb/>
Fresh Daily - 5 Lbs. Pack Or More<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef loin<lb/>
T-Bone<lb/>
Head<lb/>
Crisp<lb/>
Iceberg<lb/>
Steak I Lettuce<lb/>
<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Calif. Cellars<lb/>
Gallo<lb/>
Wine<lb/>
Pkf. of 6 12 0 Cans<lb/>
Old Milwaukee<lb/>
Pkf of 6 12 02. Coos<lb/>
Pabst<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
1.S Liter ? Beris.o Cfttbfit Cbeaie Blanc<lb/>
Dry Roe. Dry tfbtie, ft. ColoMbord Rblae. Roto<lb/>
Ziofu.ol<lb/>
3 Liter -Cbablit Blade. Hty. BureuoaY Bureuody<lb/>
Pink Cbablit. Rbi?o. Roe Rote, Vir Rote<lb/>
Quart<lb/>
6.5 0zLt.Ck.?kT.M,l0il<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Mayonnaise Of The<lb/>
? SeaC<lb/>
Wky Pay M.29<lb/>
Why Pay '1.09<lb/>
59<lb/>
18.5 Oz. - BeHy Croekar<lb/>
Cake Mixes<lb/>
2109<lb/>
30) Cm - Slakaly<lb/>
FruU Cocktail<lb/>
49 0?-ee<lb/>
Cold Power<lb/>
59?<lb/>
? Pa -1r1?<lb/>
Page Toilet Tissue<lb/>
10 Oe-ea <lb/>
Jeno's PizzaS1<lb/>
589<lb/>
4.S Oz. - Lioer ft Cbitkeo Tooe Beef ft Liver<lb/>
Beef ft Cblcbtd<lb/>
Bright Eyes Cat Food<lb/>
sx<lb/>
TASTY<lb/>
14 0i. Oof Feo4 - Chaffta. oMlHwr ft Beef<lb/>
r Kal Kan<lb/>
Margarine Quarters<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
fc<lb/>
SO-DW<lb/>
SQ-DRI<lb/>
.SO-DR!<lb/>
119 Skaatt ? 1 Ply<lb/>
Larfe Beaatlftl<lb/>
Eieb <lb/>
So-Ori iWU&amp; HolMay " F,orida<lb/>
Towels sJlkPainseHiasJfe Tangerines ?<lb/>
6800 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES<lb/>
-<lb/>
w ??- -v-v<lb/>
 - -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057593_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>